SUPREME COURT OF CANADA
CITATION: MediaQMI inc. v. Kamel,
2021 SCC 23 APPEAL HEARD: November
12, 2020
JUDGMENT RENDERED: May
28, 2021
DOCKET: 38755
BETWEEN:
MediaQMI inc.
Appellant
and
Magdi Kamel and Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux
de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal
Respondents
- and -
Fédération professionnelle des journalistes du Québec, Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation, La Presse Inc. and Ad IDEM/Canadian Media Lawyer
Association
Interveners
OFFICIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION
CORAM: Wagner C.J. and Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Côté, Brown, Rowe,
Martin and Kasirer JJ.
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT:
(paras. 1 to 73)
JOINT DISSENTING REASONS:
(paras. 74 to 143)
Côté J. (Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis and Brown JJ.
concurring)
Wagner C.J. and Kasirer J. (Rowe and Martin JJ. concurring)
NOTE: This document is subject to editorial revision before its reproduction in final
form in the Canada Supreme Court Reports.
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MEDIAQMI INC. v. KAMEL
MediaQMI inc. Appellant
v.
Magdi Kamel and
Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de
services sociaux de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal Respondents
and
Fédération professionnelle des journalistes du Québec,
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation,
La Presse Inc. and
Ad IDEM/Canadian Media Lawyer Association Interveners
Indexed as: MediaQMI inc. v. Kamel
2021 SCC 23
File No.: 38755.
2020: November 12; 2021: May 28.
Present: Wagner C.J. and Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Côté, Brown, Rowe, Martin
and Kasirer JJ.
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL OF QUEBEC
Civil procedure ⸺ Openness of court proceedings ⸺ Right to access court
record ⸺ Discontinuance ⸺ Retrieval of exhibits ⸺ Public body bringing action
against former manager alleging misappropriation of public funds ⸺ Newspaper
publishing company filing motion for access to sealed exhibits in court record ⸺ Court
authorizing retrieval of exhibits because of discontinuance filed by public body before
motion heard ⸺ Whether Superior Court judge was obliged to decide application for
access to court record before authorizing retrieval of exhibits ⸺ Code of Civil
Procedure, CQLR, c. C-25.01, arts. 11, 108.
On October 6, 2016, the Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services
sociaux de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal (“CIUSSS”) brought a legal action against a
former manager, alleging misappropriation of public funds. The action was
accompanied by an application for a Norwich order to obtain the identity of the holder
of the four bank accounts to which the money had allegedly been diverted. On
October 7, 2016, the Superior Court made the Norwich order and ordered that the entire
record be sealed, including the four exhibits filed by the CIUSSS in support of its
allegations. On March 29, 2017, MediaQMI, a newspaper publishing company, filed a
motion to unseal based on art. 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure (“C.C.P.”) and s. 23
of the Charter of human rights and freedoms (“Quebec Charter”) in order to have
access to the court record, including the exhibits that might be in it. The hearing of the
motion, scheduled for April 5, 2017, was postponed to April 25, 2017. In the meantime,
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on April 19, 2017, the CIUSSS discontinued its legal action. It tried to retrieve the
exhibits it had filed, but the staff of the court office could not find them. When the
motion was heard on April 25, the CIUSSS made an oral request to retrieve the exhibits
filed in the court record. MediaQMI opposed that request.
The Superior Court ordered that the court record be unsealed based on the
test set out in Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, and
R. v. Mentuck, 2001 SCC 76, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442, finding that the evidence was
insufficient to depart from the principle of open court proceedings. However, it granted
the request to retrieve the exhibits made by the CIUSSS, in accordance with art. 108
C.C.P., because of the discontinuance that had terminated the proceeding. The day after
the judgment was rendered, the CIUSSS retrieved its exhibits. The Court of Appeal
dismissed MediaQMI’s appeal from the conclusion relating to the retrieval of exhibits.
Held (Wagner C.J. and Rowe, Martin and Kasirer JJ. dissenting): The
appeal should be dismissed.
Per Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Côté and Brown JJ.: MediaQMI
cannot obtain a copy of the exhibits that were in the Superior Court’s record at the time
its motion was filed. The right to have access to court records set out in art. 11 C.C.P.
does not extend beyond what is in these records at the time they are consulted. Once
the parties retrieve their exhibits at the end of a proceeding in accordance with art. 108
C.C.P., members of the public will still be able to consult the record but will no longer
have access to the exhibits that have been removed from it.
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Article 11 C.C.P., which sets out the principle of open proceedings, does
not confer a specific right to access exhibits that were once part of court records. That
provision gives access to a court record whose content is governed in part by art. 108
C.C.P. Thus, the retrieval of exhibits from a record in the circumstances described in
art. 108 C.C.P., when an application to consult the record is pending, does not infringe
a rule of public order; it simply constitutes the exercise of a right provided for in the
Code of Civil Procedure. The position that the scope of the principle of open
proceedings should be interpreted in light of the charters must be rejected. Whatever
protection that principle may have under the charters, the legislature remains free to fix
the scope of the principle in the rules it enacts, and it is not the role of the courts to do
so in its place. In the civil law context, creating law remains the legislature’s
prerogative. Accordingly, in the absence of a constitutional challenge, the rules clearly
stated in the Code of Civil Procedure are what apply. Moreover, except where there is
ambiguity that persists even though the contextual approach to interpretation has been
applied, courts do not have to interpret statutes so as to make them consistent with the
principles and values of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This approach
also accords with the interpretative provisions of the Quebec Charter.
The new Code of Civil Procedure that came into force in 2016 sets out the
general scheme relating to the public nature of civil justice in arts. 11 to 16 and
establishes two distinct rights in art. 11: the right to attend court hearings wherever they
are held and the right to have access to court records and entries in the registers of the
courts. Article 108 C.C.P. makes explicit reference to that general scheme; this is clear
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both from the words used by the legislature and from the holistic reading of the Code
of Civil Procedure called for by its preliminary provision and by s. 41.1 of Quebec’s
Interpretation Act. It therefore seems to be beyond question that art. 108 C.C.P.
concerns the content of the records contemplated in arts. 11 to 16 C.C.P., that is, the
records that are subject to a court’s supervisory power and control. That provision thus
governs the keeping, retrieval and preservation of the exhibits filed in the record to
which art. 11 C.C.P. gives access.
The scope of art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. cannot be limited on the basis of
passages from parliamentary debates suggesting that the legislature’s objective was to
reduce the costs associated with the judicial system. Arguments from parliamentary
history cannot result in the refusal to apply a clear rule, as doing so would compromise
the reader’s right to rely on the letter of the law interpreted in its context. Courts do not
have to interpret or implement the objective underlying a legislative scheme or
provision, but must rather interpret and apply the text through which the legislature
seeks to achieve that objective.
In this case, the text of art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. authorizes the parties to
retrieve their exhibits by consent in the course of a proceeding, and requires them to
retrieve their exhibits once the proceeding has ended. It reiterates, with some
modifications, the two rules set out in arts. 83 and 331.9 of the former Code of Civil
Procedure, which were incorporated when the general scheme for the communication
and filing of exhibits was reformed. That 1994 reform was designed to encourage
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parties to exchange information with regard to their respective evidence and to
communicate their exhibits to one another directly, without first filing them in the court
record. It contemplated that exhibits would be filed and kept on the basis of usefulness
and necessity. As the successor of that scheme, art. 108 C.C.P. revises and unifies the
rules on the keeping, retrieval and preservation of the exhibits filed in court records.
Insofar as it governs the content of those records, it has a direct impact on the
information to which the public can have access under art. 11 C.C.P.
Article 11 C.C.P. gives the public the right to have access to court records,
subject to exceptions for confidential information. This right applies during and after a
proceeding. Even after the proceeding has ended, the exhibits can be consulted as long
as they remain in the record, but once the parties retrieve them or the court clerk
destroys them, they cease to be part of the record to which the public can have access.
This conclusion is in keeping with the intention expressed by the legislature through
the words of arts. 11 and 108 C.C.P., with the legislative objectives underlying those
provisions, with the general scheme of the Code of Civil Procedure and with civil law
principles of interpretation. It also avoids giving the principle that civil justice is public
set out in art. 11 C.C.P. a scope that might distort that principle, just as it avoids
undermining other important objectives of the Code of Civil Procedure, such as the
prevention and resolution of disputes. The objective of facilitating the resolution of
disputes would surely be undermined if parties who wished to come to an agreement
after taking a matter to court could not bring the documents they had filed with the
court back into the private sphere.
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Because arts. 11 and 108 C.C.P. do not give rise to any judicial discretion,
the test from Dagenais and Mentuck should not be applied in this case. That test
establishes that the discretion to make an order limiting the openness of proceedings
must be exercised within the boundaries set by the Canadian Charter, having regard to
rights and interests that pull in opposite directions. But where the law fixes the scope
of the principle of open proceedings without conferring any discretion on judges, there
is no reason to seek a correct balance between competing rights and interests that is
within the boundaries set by the Canadian Charter.
In this case, MediaQMI’s right under art. 11 C.C.P. to have access to court
records was never compromised. This was because the sealing order that had kept the
record confidential until then came to an end when the Superior Court’s judgment was
rendered. MediaQMI could have consulted the exhibits in issue if it had applied for
access to the record during the time when the exhibits were available, since no
conservatory measure had been sought by the parties. It did not do so. Only the terms
of access to the court record and the content of that record changed between the filing
of the motion to unseal and the retrieval of the exhibits. However, that situation was
beyond the reach of art. 11 because it fell within art. 108 C.C.P. The fact that
MediaQMI filed its motion under art. 11 C.C.P. prior to the CIUSSS’s discontinuance
is not determinative and did not give it any acquired right to argue that motion. Nor did
it give MediaQMI any right to require that the content of the court record remain
unchanged until the motion was decided.
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The legal consequence that art. 213 C.C.P. attaches to a discontinuance is
the termination of the proceeding. Yet the termination of the proceeding entitles the
parties to retrieve their exhibits in accordance with art. 108 C.C.P. In this case, if
MediaQMI wanted to prevent the exercise of that power, it had to contest the
discontinuance extinguishing the proceeding. It did not do so. There was therefore
nothing that prohibited the CIUSSS from retrieving its exhibits.
Per Wagner C.J. and Rowe, Martin and Kasirer JJ. (dissenting): The
appeal should be allowed. The case should be remanded to the Superior Court so that
it can decide the application for access to the exhibits on the basis of the analytical
framework established in Dagenais and Mentuck, which was affirmed for civil
proceedings in Sierra Club of Canada v. Canada (Minister of Finance), 2002 SCC 41,
[2002] 2 S.C.R. 52, and make the orders it considers necessary.
The parties’ control over the course of their case is a guiding principle set
out in art. 19 C.C.P. This principle extends to the parties’ right to agree at any stage of
the proceeding to settle their dispute or otherwise terminate the proceeding (para. 3). It
does not allow them to override a judge’s discretion to ensure compliance with the rule
of public order arising from the principle of open proceedings, nor does it allow them
to exercise their powers at the expense of the existing and legitimate interests of third
persons in seeking the application of that rule. The fact is that when parties decide to
have recourse to the civil justice system, which is a public service, they do so knowing
that members of the public may exercise their fundamental right to information about
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court proceedings. The private resolution of a dispute alone cannot ipso facto supplant
the principle of open proceedings when invoked in accordance with procedural rules
while a proceeding is still under way. This is all the more true in a case in which a judge
issued an order limiting the principle of open court proceedings as soon as the legal
action was filed, as in this case.
The fundamental principle of open court proceedings, a hallmark of a free
and democratic society, is affirmed in art. 11 C.C.P., which provides that anyone may
attend court hearings and have access to court records. The public, and in particular the
news media, have the interest required to seek the application of this principle. The
legislature provides for two specific exceptions to this fundamental principle: first,
where the law provides for in camera proceedings (art. 15 C.C.P.) or restricts access to
court records (art. 16 C.C.P.), which is notably the case in family matters; second, by
giving the court a discretion to make an exception to the fundamental principle of open
proceedings if, in its opinion, public order or the protection of substantial and legitimate
interests so requires (art. 12 C.C.P.). A court seized of an application to limit the
openness of court proceedings must exercise its discretion in accordance with the
analytical framework developed in Dagenais, Mentuck and Sierra Club, even if the
application is unopposed.
The rules on discontinuance flow from the principle that the parties control
the course of their case (art. 19 para. 3 C.C.P.). To be set up against the other parties,
the unilateral discontinuance need only be notified to those parties in accordance with
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art. 213 C.C.P. However, the principle that the parties control the course of their case
is subject to a qualification, developed and consistently applied by the courts: a
discontinuance may not prejudice the rights of the other parties or of third persons,
including the right to have an application filed prior to the discontinuance decided.
Because discontinuance constitutes a voluntary renunciation of a right or claim, it
affects only the rights of the renouncing party, that is, the party that discontinues
proceedings or waives a right or claim. A discontinuance may therefore be valid yet
ineffective against the rights of third persons. It follows that the purpose or effect of a
party’s discontinuance cannot be to avoid a suit already brought against it.
If the discontinuance of a proceeding cannot be relied on at the expense of
third persons’ existing legitimate interests or contrary to the rules of public order, then
parties cannot avail themselves of art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. in order to remove exhibits
from the record after an application has been made under art. 11 C.C.P. The control
that the parties have over the course of their case must be exercised in compliance with
the principles of civil procedure (art. 19 C.C.P.). The parties cannot displace a rule of
public order, even by mutual consent. Applying the principle that the parties control
the course of their case as if it were an end in itself would be contrary to Quebec
jurisprudence and to the general scheme of the Code of Civil Procedure. It would also
conflict with the well-established principle that the Code’s provisions must be
interpreted in harmony with the Quebec Charter and the general principles of law.
Therefore, the principle that the parties control the course of the case could not
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adversely affect MediaQMI’s existing and legitimate interests in seeking the
application of the rule of public order requiring open court proceedings.
From the moment MediaQMI applied to unseal the record and access the
exhibits, a new proceeding began, and it went beyond the strictly private interests of
the parties to the principal litigation. The discontinuance filed following the application
brought under art. 11 C.C.P. could not defeat that new proceeding, which was separate
from the principal litigation and related to the proper functioning of the judicial
institution, whose legitimacy depends on its openness and in part on media scrutiny.
MediaQMI was thus seeking to play its role as a surrogate for the public and to inform
readers of what was taking place in the courts, a crucial role in a context where it was
alleged that fraud had been committed within a public body responsible for ensuring
the proper functioning of regional health institutions. The court had to exercise the
discretion conferred on it by art. 12 C.C.P. However, the discontinuance would have
produced its full effects if MediaQMI had filed its application after the CIUSSS’s
discontinuance and had sought access to the exhibits when they were no longer in the
record. Its appeal would have failed on that basis unless it challenged the
constitutionality of art. 108 C.C.P.
Cases Cited
By Côté J.
Referred to: Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R.
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835; R. v. Mentuck, 2001 SCC 76, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442; Lac d’Amiante du Québec Ltée
v. 2858-0702 Québec Inc., 2001 SCC 51, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 743; Cie Immobilière Viger
Ltée v. Giguère Inc., [1977] 2 S.C.R. 67; Prud’homme v. Prud’homme, 2002 SCC 85,
[2002] 4 S.C.R. 663; Quebec (Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la
jeunesse) v. Communauté urbaine de Montréal, 2004 SCC 30, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 789;
Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership v. Rex, 2002 SCC 42, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 559;
Pharmascience Inc. v. Binet, 2006 SCC 48, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 513; R. v. Clarke, 2014
SCC 28, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 612; Michel v. Graydon, 2020 SCC 24; Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes
Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27; Construction Gilles Paquette ltée v. Entreprises Végo
ltée, [1997] 2 S.C.R. 299; Canadian National Railway Co. v. Canada (Attorney
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[2006] 1 S.C.R. 865; Sun Indalex Finance, LLC v. United Steelworkers, 2013 SCC 6,
[2013] 1 S.C.R. 271; TELUS Communications Inc. v. Wellman, 2019 SCC 19, [2019]
2 S.C.R. 144; R. v. Rafilovich, 2019 SCC 51; Imperial Oil v. Jacques, 2014 SCC 66,
[2014] 3 S.C.R. 287; Vickery v. Nova Scotia Supreme Court (Prothonotary), [1991] 1
S.C.R. 671; Sable Offshore Energy Inc. v. Ameron International Corp., 2013 SCC 37,
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Region) (2002), 59 O.R. (3d) 18; Hong v. Lavy, 2019 NSSC 271, 46 C.P.C. (8th) 327;
Attorney General of Nova Scotia v. MacIntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175; Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 480; Sierra
Club of Canada v. Canada (Minister of Finance), 2002 SCC 41, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 522;
Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2011 SCC 2, [2011] 1
S.C.R. 19; British Columbia (Attorney General) v. Provincial Court Judges’
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Association of British Columbia, 2020 SCC 20; Tremblay v. Quebec (Commission des
affaires sociales), [1992] 1 S.C.R. 952; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; Globe and
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v. Vancouver Sun, 2007 SCC 43, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 253; Canadian Broadcasting Corp.
v. The Queen, 2011 SCC 3, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 65; Bisaillon v. Concordia University, 2006
SCC 19, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 666; Classic Fabrics Corp. v. B. Rawe GMBH & Co., 2001
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Canada inc., 2000 CanLII 9254; Droit de la famille — 092038, 2009 QCCS 3822,
[2009] R.D.F. 646.
By Wagner C.J. and Kasirer J. (dissenting)
Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835; R. v.
Mentuck, 2001 SCC 76, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442; Sierra Club of Canada v. Canada
(Minister of Finance), 2002 SCC 41, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 522; Charland v. Lessard, 2015
QCCA 14; Imperial Oil v. Jacques, 2014 SCC 66, [2014] 3 S.C.R. 287; Union Carbide
Canada Inc. v. Bombardier Inc., 2014 SCC 35, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 800; Homans v.
Gestion Paroi inc., 2017 QCCA 480; J.G. v. Nadeau, 2016 QCCA 167; Lac d’Amiante
du Québec Ltée v. 2858-0702 Québec Inc., 2001 SCC 51, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 743; Globe
and Mail v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010 SCC 41, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 592; Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v. Harkat, 2014 SCC 37, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 33; B. (B.) v.
Québec (Procureur général), [1998] R.J.Q. 317; Rosei v. Benesty, 2020 QCCS 1795;
Marcovitz v. Bruker, 2005 QCCA 835, [2005] R.J.Q. 2482, rev’d on another point 2007
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SCC 54, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 607; Sirius Services conseils en technologie de l’information
inc. v. Boisvert, 2017 QCCA 518; Horic v. Nepveu, 2016 QCCS 3921; Edmonton
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Statutes and Regulations Cited
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Act to modify the organization and governance of the health and social services
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c. C-25, r. 8, rr. 2, 3.
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APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal (Marcotte and
Schrager JJ.A. and Samson J. (ad hoc)), 2019 QCCA 814, [2019] AZ-51434213,
[2019] J.Q. no 3707, 2019 CarswellQue 3871 (WL Can.), affirming a decision of
Gagnon J., 2017 QCCS 4691, [2017] AZ-51434213, [2017] J.Q. no 14219 (QL), 2017
CarswellQue 9231 (WL Can.). Appeal dismissed, Wagner C.J. and Rowe, Martin and
Kasirer JJ. dissenting.
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Mathieu Quenneville and Marc-André Nadon, for the appellant.
Jonathan Pierre-Étienne and Antoun Al-Saoub, for the respondent Magdi
Kamel.
Dominique Vallières, for the respondent Centre intégré universitaire de
santé et de services sociaux de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal.
Mark Bantey, for the intervener Fédération professionnelle des journalistes
du Québec.
Christian Leblanc, for the intervener the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation, La Presse Inc. and Ad IDEM/Canadian Media Lawyer Association.
English version of the judgment of Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Côté and Brown
JJ. delivered by
CÔTÉ J. —
I. Overview
[1] The importance of the principle of open court proceedings is no longer a
matter of controversy today. It will readily be agreed that, as one early author elegantly
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stated, justice is [TRANSLATION] “a work of light and not of darkness”: J. Frain du
Tremblay, Essais sur l’idée du parfait magistrat où l’on fait voir une partie des
obligations des Juges (1701), at pp. 139-40. This is not in question here. But however
important a principle may be, it is not without limits. This appeal calls upon us to clarify
the limits of the openness of court proceedings. What must be determined, in essence,
is how far the aspiration for transparency in the judicial process should lead and at what
point secrecy can prevail.
[2] In Quebec, the Code of Civil Procedure, CQLR, c. C-25.01 (“C.C.P.”),
gives members of the public the right to have access to court records: art. 11 C.C.P.1
No prior authorization is required: anyone can examine the content of such records.
The Code also contains a provision dealing with the retrieval of exhibits filed in a court
record: art. 108 C.C.P. In the course of a proceeding, the parties are authorized to
retrieve their exhibits if all of them consent; once the proceeding has ended, they are
obliged to do so, otherwise the exhibits may be destroyed by the court clerk after one
year. The question at the centre of this appeal is whether art. 11 C.C.P. allows members
of the public to consult exhibits that have been retrieved by the parties in accordance
with art. 108 C.C.P. In my view, the right to have access to court records set out in
art. 11 C.C.P. does not extend beyond what is in these records at the time they are
consulted. This means that once the parties retrieve their exhibits at the end of a
1 The relevant statutory provisions are reproduced in an appendix.
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proceeding, members of the public will still be able to consult the record but will no
longer have access to the exhibits that have been removed from it.
II. Background
[3] On October 6, 2016, the respondent Centre intégré universitaire de santé et
de services sociaux de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal (“CIUSSS”) instituted court
proceedings against one of its former managers, the respondent Magdi Kamel. The
originating application alleged misappropriation of funds in the amount of $410,266
and sought the repayment of that sum as well as $100,000 in damages. It was
accompanied by an application for a Norwich order to obtain the identity of the holder
of the four bank accounts to which that sum had allegedly been diverted between
April 1, 2009 and March 31, 2015. The CIUSSS filed four exhibits in support of its
applications, including an expert forensic accounting report produced by PwC. On
October 7, 2016, the Superior Court made the Norwich order and ordered that the entire
record be sealed.
[4] Seizures before judgment were carried out at Mr. Kamel’s residences on
October 17 and November 22, 2016. The Journal de Montréal, a newspaper published
by the appellant, MediaQMI, devoted two articles to the seizures on October 31 and
December 13, 2016. Wishing to find out the details of the court proceedings,
MediaQMI filed its [TRANSLATION] “Motion to unseal” on March 29, 2017 in order to
have access to the court record and the exhibits that might be in it. In that motion based
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on art. 11 C.C.P. and s. 23 of the Charter of human rights and freedoms, CQLR,
c. C-12 (“Quebec Charter”), MediaQMI sought only a single conclusion:
[TRANSLATION] TERMINATE any order whose purpose is to restrict the
access of the public and the Applicant to the Court record for file
500-17-095861-160.
[5] The hearing of the motion, scheduled for April 5, 2017, was postponed to
April 25, 2017. In the meantime, the CIUSSS discontinued its originating application.
It filed a notice of discontinuance on April 19, 2017 and, over the next few days, tried
to retrieve the four exhibits filed in support of its application. However, the staff of the
court office could not find the record.
[6] On April 21, 2017, Mr. Kamel applied to the Superior Court for
authorization to withdraw the originating application from the court record or, in the
alternative, for an order preventing the public from having access to it. The CIUSSS
did not oppose Mr. Kamel’s application, but MediaQMI indicated its opposition on
April 24, 2017.
[7] On April 25, 2017, Gagnon J. heard MediaQMI’s motion in camera. At the
hearing, counsel for the CIUSSS made an oral request to retrieve the exhibits filed in
the court record, emphasizing that the expert forensic accounting report produced by
PwC was private. MediaQMI opposed that request to retrieve the exhibits. Gagnon J.
took the case under advisement after extending the sealing order until his judgment was
rendered. No other conservatory measure was sought by any of the parties.
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III. Judicial History
A. Quebec Superior Court, 2017 QCCS 4691 (Gagnon J.)
[8] Gagnon J. rendered his decision on July 20, 2017. After noting that
MediaQMI was neither a party to the litigation nor, strictly speaking, an intervenor, he
decided the motion to unseal on the basis of the test set out in Dagenais v. Canadian
Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, and R. v. Mentuck, 2001 SCC 76, [2001] 3
S.C.R. 442 (“Dagenais/Mentuck test”). Finding that the evidence was insufficient to
depart from the principle of open court proceedings, he observed that the mere desire
to avoid embarrassment for Mr. Kamel and negative publicity for the CIUSSS did not
justify keeping the record confidential. He therefore ordered that the record be
unsealed.
[9] With regard to the oral request to retrieve the exhibits, Gagnon J. stated
that the rights of journalists and the media do not override the application of the
ordinary rules of the Code of Civil Procedure. He added that the efficiency of civil
procedure is based in part on out-of-court settlements and discontinuances. As soon as
a proceeding ends, he wrote, the parties have complete freedom to retrieve all exhibits
from the record and to shield them from public scrutiny; indeed, art. 108 C.C.P.
requires them to do so. Because the proceeding in this case had been terminated by a
discontinuance, Gagnon J. authorized the CIUSSS to remove its exhibits from the court
record. Counsel for the CIUSSS retrieved them the day after the judgment was
rendered, on July 21, 2017. After reading MediaQMI’s notice of appeal, he sent its
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counsel an email written [TRANSLATION] “[w]ithout prejudice” in which he confirmed,
“without any admission, that we are keeping a copy of the exhibits . . . until the appeal
is decided or settled”: A.R., at p. 82.
B. Quebec Court of Appeal, 2019 QCCA 814 (Marcotte and Schrager JJ.A. and
Samson J. (ad hoc))
[10] The three Quebec Court of Appeal judges wrote separate reasons to dispose
of MediaQMI’s appeal from the conclusion relating to the retrieval of exhibits.
[11] Citing Lac d’Amiante du Québec Ltée v. 2858-0702 Québec Inc., 2001
SCC 51, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 743, Samson J. noted that Quebec courts may not create
positive rules of civil procedure, much less rules that would be contrary to the Code of
Civil Procedure. In his view, MediaQMI’s motion was ancillary to the litigation
between Mr. Kamel and the CIUSSS. By terminating the proceeding, the
discontinuance had also resulted in a loss of jurisdiction over that ancillary motion.
Since the parties controlled the course of their case, the CIUSSS could retrieve its
exhibits as soon as the discontinuance was filed. The Dagenais/Mentuck test did not
apply, because that test presupposes a discretion that did not exist in this case. First,
there was no longer any litigation between the parties; second, art. 108 C.C.P. confers
no discretion. Samson J. was therefore of the view that the appeal should be dismissed.
[12] Schrager J.A. arrived at the same result, but for different reasons. In his
opinion, discontinuance creates a legal fiction that puts the parties back in the position
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they were in prior to the court proceedings; it takes exhibits out of the public domain
and returns them to the private sphere. The justification for dismissing MediaQMI’s
application lies in the fact that there were no active court proceedings and that the
documents were private; it does not lie in art. 108 C.C.P. Schrager J.A. described that
provision as being purely procedural and intended to reduce the costs associated with
court records; as a result, he did not regard it as a valid basis for a decision to deny
access to the exhibits. The Dagenais/Mentuck test could not apply in the absence of
active court proceedings. Schrager J.A. nonetheless observed, in obiter, that that test
might permit access to documents relating to litigation that had ended in the limited
case where the purpose of the motion was to scrutinize the judicial process as such, but
this was not the case here: MediaQMI was seeking information about the parties
themselves, not about the judicial process that had led to the discontinuance.
[13] In her dissenting reasons, Marcotte J.A., like her colleague Schrager J.A.,
found that art. 108 C.C.P. sets out an administrative rule whose purpose is to declutter
court records; such a rule cannot be used to circumvent the fundamental principle of
open court proceedings. In her view, the Superior Court judge had erred by disregarding
the fact that the motion to unseal had been filed before the CIUSSS’s discontinuance,
that is, before the end of the proceeding. In light of the importance of the principle of
open proceedings and the specific context of the motion, which concerned litigation
relating to the management of public funds, Marcotte J.A. found that the Superior Court
judge should have determined whether the exhibits were confidential before
authorizing the CIUSSS to retrieve them. She would therefore have referred the case
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back to the Superior Court so that it could decide that issue on the basis of the
Dagenais/Mentuck test.
IV. Parties’ Arguments
[14] It is important to note from the outset that MediaQMI is not challenging
the constitutionality of art. 11 or art. 108 C.C.P. Nor is it contesting the CIUSSS’s
discontinuance. In this Court, it essentially argues that the scope of the principle of
open proceedings must be analyzed in light of s. 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms and the analogous guarantees set out in the Quebec Charter, and that its
application for access to exhibits should therefore be decided on the basis of the
Dagenais/Mentuck test. Relying on the legislative history of art. 108 C.C.P., it argues
that this provision does not override the exercise of its constitutional rights. It maintains
that the CIUSSS’s discontinuance and the subsequent retrieval of the exhibits in issue
did not make its application for access to the exhibits obsolete: the filing of its motion
to unseal allegedly crystallized its rights by giving it an acquired right to argue its
application. According to it, art. 11 C.C.P. guarantees a right of access to exhibits that
is not limited to what is found in the court record concerned. In oral argument, it
qualified the acquired rights argument by stating that the principle of open proceedings
protects the right to have applications for access to exhibits decided even several years
after a proceeding has ended (transcript, at pp. 21-22). Applying the Dagenais/Mentuck
test to the facts of the case, MediaQMI takes the position that there is no reason for the
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exhibits in issue to be confidential, and it therefore asks the Court to declare that they
are public and to order the CIUSSS to provide it with a copy of them.
[15] The CIUSSS argues that the public nature of a court record does not
necessarily mean that exhibits will continue to be part of it. The right to consult records
is limited to what is contained within the records at the time they are consulted. That
content is circumscribed by the guiding principle of procedure that the parties control
the course of their case as well as by art. 108 C.C.P. The CIUSSS takes the view that
art. 108 C.C.P. creates an exception to the principle of open proceedings given that it
is an instance where “the law . . . restricts access . . . to certain documents filed in a
court record” (art. 11 para. 2 C.C.P.). As art. 108 C.C.P. confers no discretion on a
judge, it follows that the Dagenais/Mentuck test does not apply.
[16] Mr. Kamel argues that the position taken by MediaQMI implies the
creation of a new procedural rule that would be contrary to the rules set out in the Code
of Civil Procedure. He submits that the preliminary provision of the Code and the
principles of statutory interpretation prevent art. 108 C.C.P. from being reduced to a
purely administrative provision; the words of that article are clear, and the legislature
would have used different language if it had intended to limit the freedom of parties to
retrieve their exhibits. Mr. Kamel adds that because MediaQMI was never a party to
the proceeding, it cannot contest the discontinuance or the consequences it may have
had for its rights. Like the CIUSSS, he argues that art. 108 C.C.P. determines the
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outcome of the application for access to exhibits and makes the Dagenais/Mentuck test
inapplicable.
V. Issues
[17] This appeal raises two questions:
A. What is the extent of the right conferred by the Code of Civil Procedure
to have access to the content of court records?
B. Is MediaQMI entitled to have access to the exhibits that were in the
court record at the time it filed its motion?
VI. Analysis
A. What Is the Extent of the Right Conferred by the Code of Civil Procedure to Have
Access to the Content of Court Records?
[18] Article 11 C.C.P. sets out the principle of open court proceedings and gives
members of the public the right to “have access to court records and entries in the
registers of the courts”. This provision guarantees access to court records and to what
they contain at the time they are consulted, aside from confidential information. Where
an exhibit is retrieved from a record pursuant to art. 108 C.C.P., it generally returns to
the private sphere. Article 11 C.C.P. therefore does not confer a specific right to access
exhibits that were once part of court records. A number of considerations favour this
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interpretation: the text, object and scheme of the Code of Civil Procedure, the
legislative history, the guiding principles of civil procedure, and practical
considerations relating to the resolution of disputes.
[19] In their reasons, my colleagues suggest that the result I reach would make
it possible for parties to circumvent the principle of open court proceedings, which they
characterize as being of public order. That criticism is unfounded. Article 11 C.C.P.
gives access to a record whose content is governed in part by art. 108 C.C.P. The
retrieval of exhibits from a record in the circumstances described in art. 108 C.C.P.,
when an application to consult the record is pending, does not “infring[e] a rule of
public order” (reasons of the Chief Justice and Kasirer J., at para. 123); it simply
constitutes the exercise of a right provided for in the Code of Civil Procedure. With
great respect for my colleagues’ view, emphasizing the importance of the principle of
open proceedings is not sufficient to extend its implications beyond what is authorized
by law. Fundamental though it may be, this principle remains circumscribed by the
limits set out in the Code of Civil Procedure. Specifically, it does not give members of
the public the right to have access to exhibits that have been removed from a court
record in accordance with art. 108 C.C.P.
[20] In the context of Quebec civil procedure, it is therefore impossible, in my
view, to give the principle of open proceedings the interpretative scope given to it by
MediaQMI and my colleagues without also rewriting several rules expressly set out in
the Code of Civil Procedure. But as former Chief Justice Fauteux wrote,
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[TRANSLATION] “[t]he Constitution contemplates only one system for making laws, not
two systems that can function simultaneously, in a diverging manner”: Le livre du
magistrat (1980), at p. 125. Whatever protection the principle of open proceedings may
have under the charters, the legislature remains free to fix the scope of that principle in
the rules it enacts. It is not the role of the courts to conduct that exercise in its place.
Accordingly, in the absence of a constitutional challenge, the rules clearly stated in the
Code of Civil Procedure are what apply.
(1) Interpretation of the Code of Civil Procedure
[21] In Lac d’Amiante, the Court noted that in Quebec, “[t]he fundamental law
concerning civil procedure is the law enacted by the National Assembly . . . in a code
that is expressed in general terms”: para. 35. In the civil law context, creating the law
remains the legislature’s prerogative: ibid. The courts perform “only . . . a secondary
or interstitial function” in this regard by making rules of practice or exercising the
inherent or ancillary powers provided for in arts. 25 and 49 C.C.P.: paras. 36-38.
[22] This delimitation of the role of judges reflects a specifically civilian
conception of the separation of judicial and legislative functions: Lac d’Amiante, at
paras. 37-39; L. LeBel, “La méthode d’interprétation moderne: le juge devant
lui-même et en lui-même”, in S. Beaulac and M. Devinat, eds., Interpretatio non cessat
— Mélanges en l’honneur de Pierre-André Côté (2011), 103, at p. 112; Fauteux, at
pp. 123-26. This conception dates back at least to Montesquieu, who described judges
as “the mouth that pronounces the words of the law”: The Spirit of Laws (1777), vol. 1,
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at p. 208. That is an eloquent turn of phrase, though too rigid; the inclination today
would rather be to view judges as giving life to the dead letter of the law:
P. B. Mignault, “Le Code Civil de la Province de Québec et son Interprétation” (1935),
1 U.T.L.J. 104, at p. 111. Apart from exceptional situations in which civil law judges
are called upon to state the law that emerges from the interstices of the Code, their
creative activity involves [TRANSLATION] “discover[ing] the potentialities of the
[statutory] language” and “thus complet[ing] the legislature’s work”: L. LeBel, “La loi
et le droit: la nature de la fonction créatrice du juge dans le système de droit québécois”
(2015), 56 C. de D. 87, at pp. 92-93; Cie Immobilier Viger Ltée v. Giguère Inc., [1977]
2 S.C.R. 67, at pp. 75-77. In so doing, they must avoid two opposite pitfalls:
[TRANSLATION] “counter[ing] the letter with the spirit, and the spirit with the letter”
(H. F. d’Aguesseau, Discours de M. le chancelier d’Aguesseau (new ed. 1822), vol. 1,
at p. 287, cited in Fauteux, at p. 14).
[23] The Quebec legislature has reiterated these principles relating to the role
of judges in a preliminary provision whose normative value is now well established:
Lac d’Amiante, at para. 40; Prud’homme v. Prud’homme, 2002 SCC 85, [2002] 4
S.C.R. 663, at para. 30; L. Chamberland, ed., Le grand collectif: Code de procédure
civile — Commentaires et annotations, vol. 1, Articles 1 à 309 (5th ed. 2020), at
pp. 1-5. The third paragraph of that provision sets out the framework within which the
Code of Civil Procedure must be interpreted:
This Code must be interpreted and applied as a whole, in keeping with
civil law tradition. The rules it sets out are to be interpreted in the light of
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the specific provisions it contains or of those of the law, and in the matters
it deals with, the Code compensates for the silence of the other laws if the
context so admits.
[24] The preliminary provision also states that the Code of Civil Procedure
“governs” procedure before the courts “in harmony with the Charter of human rights
and freedoms”. In Quebec (Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la
jeunesse) v. Communauté urbaine de Montréal, 2004 SCC 30, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 789,
this Court commented on a similar provision in the Civil Code of Québec, stating that
“[t]he interpretation of legislation must draw on [the] principles” set out in that Charter:
para. 20. But there is a difference — and it is a significant one — between an
interpretation that draws on certain principles and an interpretation that deviates, in the
name of those principles, from the legislative intent clearly expressed in the wording
of a law.
[25] The charters are instruments that protect rights and freedoms; they are not
large Procrustean beds designed to stretch laws to the desired size. On the contrary,
they preserve the legislature’s autonomy by means of justificatory provisions like s. 1
of the Canadian Charter: T. A. Cromwell, S. Anstis and T. Touchie, “Revisiting the
Role of Presumptions of Legislative Intent in Statutory Interpretation” (2017), 95 Can.
Bar Rev. 297, at p. 322. In Quebec, the legislature made this very clear by enacting
ss. 9.1 and 51 of the Quebec Charter:
9.1. In exercising his fundamental freedoms and rights, a person shall
maintain a proper regard for democratic values, State laicity, public order
and the general well-being of the citizens of Québec.
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In this respect, the scope of the freedoms and rights, and limits to their
exercise, may be fixed by law.
51. The Charter shall not be so interpreted as to extend, limit or amend the
scope of a provision of law except to the extent provided in section 52.
[26] It is also important to note that in Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership v.
Rex, 2002 SCC 42, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 559, this Court rejected the argument that courts
should interpret statutes so as to make them consistent with the principles or values of
the Canadian Charter, except to resolve an ambiguity that persists after applying the
contextual approach to interpretation:
. . . a blanket presumption of Charter consistency could sometimes
frustrate true legislative intent, contrary to what is mandated by the
preferred approach to statutory construction. . . .
. . .
To reiterate what was stated in Symes, supra, and Willick, supra, if
courts were to interpret all statutes such that they conformed to the Charter,
this would wrongly upset the dialogic balance. Every time the principle
were applied, it would pre-empt judicial review on Charter grounds, where
resort to the internal checks and balances of s. 1 may be had. In this fashion,
the legislatures would be largely shorn of their constitutional power to
enact reasonable limits on Charter rights and freedoms, which would in
turn be inflated to near absolute status. Quite literally, in order to avoid this
result a legislature would somehow have to set out its justification for
qualifying the Charter right expressly in the statutory text, all without the
benefit of judicial discussion regarding the limitations that are permissible
in a free and democratic society. Before long, courts would be asked to
interpret this sort of enactment in light of Charter principles. The patent
unworkability of such a scheme highlights the importance of retaining a
forum for dialogue among the branches of governance. As such, where a
statute is unambiguous, courts must give effect to the clearly expressed
legislative intent and avoid using the Charter to achieve a different result.
[Emphasis deleted; paras. 64 and 66.]
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(See also Pharmascience Inc. v. Binet, 2006 SCC 48, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 513,
at para. 29; R. v. Clarke, 2014 SCC 28, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 612, at
paras. 12-15.)
[27] This approach accords with the interpretative provisions of the Quebec
Charter, including s. 53:
53. If any doubt arises in the interpretation of a provision of the Act, it shall
be resolved in keeping with the intent of the Charter.
There is therefore no doubt that the Quebec Charter can be used to interpret the Code
of Civil Procedure in appropriate circumstances. However, this possibility is not an
invitation to ignore the language of the statute and the intention expressed in it.
(2) The Principle of Open Court Proceedings in Quebec Civil Procedure
[28] Quebec has had four codes of civil procedure, those of 1867, 1897, 1965
and 2016. The codification of the principle of open court proceedings dates back to the
Code of Civil Procedure, S.Q. 1897, c. 48, which provided that only “sittings of a court
or of a judge” were public, other than in exceptional cases where secrecy was
necessary: art. 16. The 1897 codifiers drew inspiration from similar provisions found
in the French and Genevan codes of civil procedure: O. P. Dorais and A. P. Dorais,
Code de procédure civile de la province de Québec, comprenant les observations
spéciales des commissaires chargés de la révision et modification du Code de
procédure civile du Bas-Canada (1897), at p. 97. It is noteworthy that those provisions
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focused primarily on the public nature of oral argument: Code de procédure civile
(France), 1806, art. 87; Loi sur la procédure civile du canton de Genève, 1837, s. 84.
Like its predecessor, the Code of Civil Procedure, CQLR, c. C-25, enacted in 1965
(“former Code of Civil Procedure” or “former C.C.P.”), stated that “sittings of the
courts” were public: art. 13. Section 23 of the Quebec Charter, enacted in 1975, was
along the same lines, although it extended the application of the principle beyond the
courts.
[29] The open court principle was originally extended to court records not by
legislation, but by the rules of practice made in the exercise of the power conferred on
the courts by art. 47 of the former Code of Civil Procedure. The Quebec Superior Court
had made rules authorizing the public to have access to its records and registers during
business hours, subject to exceptions relating to confidential documents: Rules of
practice of the Superior Court of Québec in civil matters, R.R.Q. 1981, c. C-25, r. 8,
rules 2 and 3. The Court of Québec had adopted rules of practice to the same effect:
Regulation of the Court of Québec, CQLR, c. C-25, r. 4, ss. 3, 4, 18 and 19. It was clear
at the time that this right of access concerned the physical court records in which parties
filed their exhibits and from which they retrieved them once a proceeding had ended.
[30] In its 2001 report, the Civil Procedure Review Committee made note of the
change to the principle of openness introduced by the courts’ rules of practice:
[TRANSLATION] The importance of the open court principle in the
administration of justice, both for parties and for the public, justifies
continuing to codify it and structuring its application, including to specify
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the criteria for limiting or excluding it. All of the rules on the subject should
also be harmonized, including those made by various courts concerning
access to and the keeping and consultation of their records, such as
section 3 of the Rules of practice of the Superior Court of Québec in civil
matters. These fundamental matters in the administration of justice should
be dealt with by the code. In this regard, it is appropriate here to draw
inspiration from the rules of practice in force while updating them to take
account of information technologies or adding to them to ensure better
protection of information.
On another note, the current wording of article 13 of the Code with
respect to the openness of proceedings is imprecise given that, according
to the majority opinion in the case law, the term “audiences” in the French
version refers only to the trial. Yet the public nature of justice encompasses
the whole of the proceeding and the record. [Emphasis added.]
(Une nouvelle culture judiciaire (2001), at pp. 42-43)
The Committee therefore recommended “[s]tating that civil justice is public, both with
regard to the proceeding and with regard to the record”: p. 43.
[31] In 2016, a new Code of Civil Procedure came into force. In arts. 11 to 16,
it sets out the general scheme relating to the public nature of civil justice. Article 11
incorporates the Committee’s recommendation and frames the principle of open
proceedings as a twofold principle involving two distinct rights. It gives members of
the public the right to “attend court hearings wherever they are held” and the right to
“have access to court records and entries in the registers of the courts”. The legislature
thus followed the courts’ lead by including in art. 11 C.C.P. a right to access records
similar to the one provided for in the rules of practice, but it did not go so far as to
create a specific right to access the exhibits filed in the course of a proceeding.
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[32] The Code of Civil Procedure also indicates that the law may “restric[t]
access to the court records or to certain documents filed in a court record”: art. 11
para. 2 C.C.P. Article 12 C.C.P. states, for example, that a court may make an
exception to the principle of open proceedings if “public order . . . requires . . . that
access to a document . . . be prohibited or restricted”. In addition, there are exceptions
to the principle for records involving sensitive matters and for certain documents filed
in a sealed envelope: art. 16 C.C.P.
[33] This last point, which relates to the form in which documents must be filed,
is echoed in art. 108 para. 1 C.C.P., which requires parties to file exhibits and other
documents that contain personal and confidential information in a form that protects
the confidentiality of that information. The explicit reference to the general scheme
relating to the public nature of civil justice set out in arts. 11 to 16 C.C.P. is clear from
the text of art. 108 C.C.P. This is confirmed by the parliamentary record and the
commentary of the Minister of Justice: National Assembly of Quebec, Standing
Committee on Institutions, “Étude détaillée du projet de loi no 28 — Loi instituant le
nouveau Code de procédure civile”, Journal des débats, vol. 43, No. 79, 1st Sess., 40th
Leg., October 29, 2013, at pp. 73-77; Ministère de la Justice, Commentaires de la
ministre de la Justice: Code de procédure civile, chapitre C-25.01 (2015), at pp. 106-8.
[34] This reference to the general scheme is clear both from the language used
in art. 108 and from the holistic reading of the Code of Civil Procedure called for by
the third paragraph of its preliminary provision and by s. 41.1 of the Interpretation Act,
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CQLR, c. I-16. The term “dossier” (record or case) is used many times in the French
version of the Code of Civil Procedure and generally refers to the court record, except
where it is used metonymically to refer to the court proceeding associated with that
record: see, for example, art. 19 C.C.P. (the parties control the course of their dossier
(case)) or art. 205 C.C.P. (a judge who grants an application for recusation must
withdraw from the dossier (case)). Article 108 para. 2 C.C.P. refers to documents filed
“au dossier” (in the record). In this specific case, the dossier in question can only be
the court record mentioned in art. 107 C.C.P. to which the general scheme set out in
arts. 11 to 16 C.C.P. applies.
[35] It therefore seems to be beyond question that art. 108 C.C.P. concerns the
content of the records contemplated in arts. 11 to 16 C.C.P., that is, the records that are
subject to a court’s supervisory power and control. As I will explain, art. 108 C.C.P.
governs the keeping, retrieval and preservation of the exhibits filed in the record to
which art. 11 C.C.P. gives access.
(3) Rules Set Out in Article 108 C.C.P.
[36] Schrager and Marcotte JJ.A. accepted MediaQMI’s argument that
significantly limited the scope of art. 108 C.C.P. on the basis of certain passages from
parliamentary debates, including statements made spontaneously in answer to
questions raised before a committee of the whole House and statements made by
opposition members. In her dissenting reasons, Marcotte J.A. wrote the following:
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[TRANSLATION] . . . the scope of article 108 C.C.P. must be brought back
to its context, which is that this article reiterates the rule previously set out
in article 331.9 of the former Code of Civil Procedure, which was enacted
to reduce the costs of the judicial system and to streamline court records.
This is certainly a laudable goal, but it still cannot justify circumventing
the fundamental principle that court proceedings are public. [para. 54]
(See also the reasons of Schrager J.A., at para. 42.)
[37] With respect, some nuance is required. No rule of statutory interpretation
justifies neutering a legal rule stated in clear terms on the basis of statements made
during parliamentary debates. Otherwise, more weight would be given to spontaneous
individual statements than to the text enacted by the legislature, each word of which
must be presumed to have been chosen with care. This Court has said repeatedly that
“statutory interpretation entails discerning legislative intent by examining statutory text
in its entire context and in its grammatical and ordinary sense, in harmony with the
statute’s scheme and objects”: Michel v. Graydon, 2020 SCC 24, at para. 21; see also
Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27, at para. 21. Parliamentary debates
can certainly inform the interpretation process, but they must not make us forget the
caveats our Court has attached to the admission of this type of extrinsic evidence:
Construction Gilles Paquette ltée v. Entreprises Végo ltée, [1997] 2 S.C.R. 299, at
para. 20; Rizzo Shoes, at para. 35; Canadian National Railway Co. v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2014 SCC 40, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 135, at para. 47.
[38] The information obtained from parliamentary debates is particularly useful
when it “confirm[s] that the interpretation given is correct”: Construction Gilles
Paquette, at para. 20; see also Canada 3000 Inc. (Re), 2006 SCC 24, [2006] 1 S.C.R.
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865, at para. 57, and P.-A. Côté, in collaboration with S. Beaulac and M. Devinat, The
Interpretation of Legislation in Canada (4th ed. 2011), at pp. 466-68. This is a matter
of predictability in the law. As one author notes, “arguments from parliamentary history
must not result in the refusal to apply a clear rule, as doing so would unduly
compromise the reader’s right to rely on the letter of the law interpreted in its context”:
Côté, at pp. 467-68. With respect, the approach proposed by MediaQMI, and accepted
by Schrager and Marcotte JJ.A., does the exact opposite of that recommendation.
[39] In these circumstances, I think it is appropriate to highlight that courts do
not have to interpret — let alone implement — the objective underlying a legislative
scheme or provision; what they must interpret is the text through which the legislature
seeks to achieve that objective. The objective may be defined at various levels of
abstraction: care must therefore be taken not to define it too generally by remembering
that the goal of the interpretative exercise is to find harmony between the words of the
statute and the intended objective, not to achieve the objective “at all costs”: Sun
Indalex Finance, LLC v. United Steelworkers, 2013 SCC 6, [2013] 1 S.C.R. 271, at
para. 174 (per Cromwell J.). In addition, this exercise may bring several objectives into
play at the same time, all of which must be taken into account: TELUS Communications
Inc. v. Wellman, 2019 SCC 19, [2019] 2 S.C.R. 144, at paras. 82-83; R. v. Rafilovich,
2019 SCC 51, at paras. 29-30. In my view, this is the case of art. 108 C.C.P. I will
explain.
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[40] It is inaccurate to say that art. 108 C.C.P. merely “reiterates the rule
previously set out in article 331.9 of the former Code of Civil Procedure”: C.A.
reasons, at para. 54. It does much more than that. The first and third paragraphs of
art. 108 C.C.P. are new law: Commentaires de la ministre de la Justice, at p. 107. The
second paragraph reiterates not one rule, but two complementary rules: those set out in
arts. 83 and 331.9 of the former C.C.P.
[41] Under art. 83 of the former C.C.P., exhibits had to remain in the record
until the end of the proceeding, but it was possible to take them out “with the consent
of the opposite party or the authorization of the clerk”. Retrieval of exhibits with the
clerk’s authorization did not make its way into the new Code of Civil Procedure. As
for retrieval with consent, the consent of all the parties is now required. Apart from
this, the rule has not changed: exhibits must remain in the record until the end of the
proceeding. Once the proceeding has ended, however, it is no longer necessary for
exhibits to remain in the record. Article 331.9 of the former C.C.P. set out a second
rule: it required parties to retrieve their exhibits within one year after the end of the
proceeding, failing which the exhibits would be destroyed. This second rule is found in
virtually the same form in art. 108 C.C.P.
[42] Article 331.9 of the former C.C.P. was enacted in 1994 as part of Bill 24,
An Act to amend the Code of Civil Procedure, 3rd Sess., 34th Leg. That bill, which also
affected art. 83 of the former C.C.P., reformed the general scheme for the
communication and filing of exhibits and introduced mechanisms for the retrieval and
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destruction of exhibits. First, it encouraged parties to exchange information with regard
to their respective evidence and to communicate their exhibits to one another directly,
without first filing them in the court record. Second, it contemplated that, from then on,
exhibits would be filed and kept on the basis of usefulness and necessity. It therefore
delayed the filing of exhibits until the date closest to the start of the trial when the court
would need them, and it provided for the streamlining of records when keeping the
exhibits no longer served any purpose in the proceeding: arts. 331.7 and 331.9 of the
former C.C.P.; see also National Assembly of Quebec, “Adoption du principe — Projet
de loi 24 — Loi modifiant le Code de procédure civile”, Journal des débats, vol. 33,
No. 30, 3rd Sess., 34th Leg., June 1, 1994.
[43] That scheme, of which arts. 83 and 331.9 of the former C.C.P. were two
key components, was incorporated in substance into the new Code of Civil Procedure.
Its effect was to eliminate the role of the court office and court record as an intermediary
between the parties for forwarding their respective exhibits. In doing so, it made the
parties and their lawyers more accountable for the conduct of the proceeding and the
fairness of the debate: Civil Procedure Review Committee, at p. 138; Imperial Oil v.
Jacques, 2014 SCC 66, [2014] 3 S.C.R. 287, at para. 26. It thus gave effect to two
principles that were later made guiding principles of civil procedure: the parties’
control over the course of their case (art. 19 C.C.P.) and their duty to cooperate and to
keep one another informed (art. 20 C.C.P.).
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[44] The scope of arts. 83 and 331.9 of the former C.C.P. should not be
narrowed on the ground that the legislature’s underlying objective was purportedly to
reduce the costs associated with the judicial system. An objective defined in such a
general manner is, in fact, of quite limited assistance for the purposes of statutory
interpretation: a very large part of civil procedure could be said to be intended to reduce
the costs of the judicial system. While economic considerations related to the storage
of court records may have motivated the enactment of art. 331.9 of the former C.C.P.,
the fact remains that the legislature inserted that provision into a general scheme
designed to increase the parties’ responsibility, and lessen that of the courts, for the
communication, filing and preservation of exhibits.
[45] As the successor of the scheme introduced by Bill 24 in 1994, art. 108
C.C.P. is anything but a “purely procedural (if not mechanical)” measure that can be
displaced by the principle of open proceedings: C.A. reasons, at para. 42 (per
Schrager J.A.). On the contrary, it revises and unifies the rules on the keeping, retrieval
and preservation of the exhibits filed in the court record to which art. 11 C.C.P. gives
access. It also deals, albeit incidentally, with the filing of exhibits, although most of the
rules on that subject have been grouped together in arts. 246 to 252 C.C.P. Insofar as it
governs the content of court records, art. 108 C.C.P. has a direct impact on the
information to which the public can have access under art. 11 C.C.P.
[46] I note in passing that the Civil Procedure Review Committee
recommended the creation of a computerized system for storing court documents and
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records: p. 107. Had it been implemented, that recommendation might have made it
possible for the public to have access to documents that had been retrieved from court
records under art. 108 C.C.P. However, nothing ever came of the recommendation. It
would be an encroachment on the sphere of the legislature to implement it indirectly
by ordering a party to a proceeding that has ended to provide a copy of the exhibits
retrieved by that party to a member of the public who wishes to consult them.
(4) Respective Scope of Articles 11 and 108 C.C.P.
[47] The exhibits filed in a court record are intrinsically related to the evidence
the parties intend to adduce in support of their allegations: H. Reid, with S. Reid,
Dictionnaire de droit québécois et canadien (5th ed. 2015), at p. 474, “pièce” (exhibit);
S. Guillemard and S. Menétrey, Comprendre la procédure civile québécoise (2nd ed.
2017), at pp. XVIII, “pièce” (exhibit), and 234. Just as the parties control the course of
their case and have control of their evidence, they necessarily also have control of their
exhibits: art. 19 C.C.P.; Imperial Oil, at para. 25. They can therefore retrieve them at
any stage of the proceeding, subject to the consent of the other parties; the Code of Civil
Procedure does not require any prior authorization from the court. Article 108 C.C.P.
thus implicitly recognizes that, even after they are filed in the court record, exhibits
remain the property of the parties. Indeed, if the filing of exhibits transferred ownership
to the court, the Code would not allow the parties to retrieve them at any stage of the
proceeding, and it certainly would not require the parties to retrieve them once the
proceeding has ended. While the exhibits are in its possession, the court merely has
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“custody” of them: Vickery v. Nova Scotia Supreme Court (Prothonotary), [1991] 1
S.C.R. 671, at pp. 681-82. This is why it does not keep the exhibits in its records
indefinitely.
[48] Article 11 C.C.P. gives the public the right to have access to court records
with the documents and exhibits they contain at the time they are consulted, subject to
exceptions for confidential information. It gives “access to exhibits” only to the extent
that they are in the record. Where parties are slow to retrieve their exhibits at the end
of a proceeding, the exhibits will remain accessible to the public until they have been
retrieved from the record or destroyed by the court clerk. But once the exhibits have
been retrieved or destroyed, the public no longer has access to them.
[49] The conclusion at which I arrive is in keeping with the intention expressed
by the legislature through the words of arts. 11 and 108 C.C.P., with the legislative
objectives underlying those provisions, with the general scheme of the Code of Civil
Procedure and with civil law principles of interpretation. It also avoids giving the
principle that civil justice is public set out in art. 11 C.C.P. a scope that might distort
that principle, just as it avoids undermining other important objectives of the Code of
Civil Procedure, such as the prevention and resolution of disputes: preliminary
provision, para. 2, arts. 1, 9 para. 2 and 19 para. 3 C.C.P.
[50] In civil matters, parties generally go before the courts because they need
[TRANSLATION] “the operation of social constraints” to enforce their rights and resolve
their conflict: H. Motulsky, Principes d’une réalisation méthodique du droit privé (La
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théorie des éléments générateurs des droits subjectifs) (1948), at p. 35 (emphasis
deleted). But the Code of Civil Procedure does not chain parties to the proceedings they
have initiated; on the contrary, it reminds them that they may, at any time, settle their
dispute and thereby terminate a proceeding: art. 19 para. 3 C.C.P. It therefore
subordinates the judicial resolution of disputes to the restoration of social peace:
preliminary provision, para. 2; S. Guillemard, “Réflexions autour des sept premiers
articles du Code de procédure civile”, in S. Guillemard, ed., Le Code de procédure
civile: quelles nouveautés? (2016), 123, at pp. 128-29.
[51] Several considerations may lead to the resolution of a dispute brought
before a court. One of them is a desire for confidentiality: Sup. Ct. reasons, at para. 119.
As my colleague Abella J. once noted, a climate of confidentiality “promotes
settlements”: Sable Offshore Energy Inc. v. Ameron International Corp., 2013 SCC 37,
[2013] 2 S.C.R. 623, at para. 12. Article 4 C.C.P. recognizes this as well. The objective
of facilitating the resolution of disputes would surely be undermined if parties who
wished to come to an agreement after taking a matter to court could not bring the
documents they had filed with the court back into the private sphere. When parties
decide to terminate a proceeding, they must be free to retrieve their exhibits. Indeed,
the Code of Civil Procedure requires them to do so.
[52] Exhibits filed in a court record may reveal various aspects of parties’
private lives, but they are accessible to the public nonetheless. The fact that civil justice
is public means that those who bring court proceedings must waive, in part, their right
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to privacy: Lac d’Amiante, at para. 42. However, they waive that right temporarily. By
arguing that any application for access to exhibits removed from a record should be
decided on the basis of the Dagenais/Mentuck test, even when the exhibits in question
were removed several years earlier, MediaQMI seeks instead to make the waiver a
permanent one.2 It would impose a burden as heavy as it is unjustified on those who
were parties to litigation that has now ended and who would like to preserve the
confidentiality of the exhibits they have retrieved. If by chance a journalist or member
of the public applied for access to those exhibits, the parties would in fact be required
to show that confidentiality is “necessary in order to prevent a serious risk to the proper
administration of justice because reasonably alternative measures will not prevent the
risk” and — given that the two branches of the test are cumulative — that the salutary
effects of confidentiality outweigh its deleterious effects on freedom of expression and
the public interest in open proceedings: Mentuck, at para. 32; see also Dagenais, at
p. 878.
[53] That position is inconsistent with the legislative intention reflected in
art. 11 C.C.P., with the general scheme of the Code of Civil Procedure and with the
objective of facilitating the resolution of disputes. It also strikes me as unworkable in
light of the situation contemplated by art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. in which the court clerk
2 In support of their position, MediaQMI and the interveners drew our attention to some cases from
common law jurisdictions, including CTV Television Inc. v. Ontario Superior Court of Justice
(Toronto Region) (2002), 59 O.R. (3d) 18 (C.A.), and Hong v. Lavy, 2019 NSSC 271, 46 C.P.C. (8th)
327. Without expressing any opinion on the merits of those decisions, I note that they are readily
distinguishable from this case. Both of them were rendered in a context in which there was no statutory
or regulatory provision that controlled access to exhibits and the content of court records, as arts. 11
and 108 C.C.P. do.
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may destroy exhibits that are not retrieved after one year. The principle of open
proceedings would thus vary in scope depending on whether or not exhibits have been
destroyed.
[54] In my view, the position advanced by MediaQMI must be rejected. The
right to have access to court records set out in art. 11 C.C.P. is not meant to ensure
perpetual access to exhibits that were in a court record at some point. Openness as
conceived of by the Code of Civil Procedure does not relate to the parties and the
private exhibits through which they intend to prove their arguments. It is first and
foremost a guarantee of [TRANSLATION] “due process, the impartiality of judges and
the proper conduct of proceedings”: R. Perrot, Institutions judiciaires (1978), at p. 366,
cited in N. Fricero, “Audience et débats”, in JurisClasseur France — Procédure civile,
by P. Carillon and R. Perrot, eds., 2020, fasc. 800-50, at No. 17 (available on
Lexis/Nexis). In this regard, it is closely related to judicial accountability: Attorney
General of Nova Scotia v. MacIntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175, at pp. 183-84.
[55] It is true that, with the advent of the Canadian Charter, judges relied on
freedom of expression and freedom of the press to give the openness of proceedings a
new dimension involving public access to information held by courts: Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 480, at
paras. 18-26; Sierra Club of Canada v. Canada (Minister of Finance), 2002 SCC 41,
[2002] 2 S.C.R. 522, at paras. 36 and 52; S. Menétrey, “L’évolution des fondements de
la publicité des procédures judiciaires internes et son impact sur certaines procédures
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arbitrales internationales” (2008), 40 Ottawa L. Rev. 117, at pp. 130-39. But whatever
its scope, the principle of open court proceedings has limits. This Court has recognized,
for example, the confidential nature of examinations on discovery (Lac d’Amiante, at
paras. 75-77) and the constitutionality of limits on filming and taking photographs in
courthouses and on using audio recordings of court proceedings: Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2011 SCC 2, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 19.
The secrecy afforded to judicial deliberations is also well established: British Columbia
(Attorney General) v. Provincial Court Judges’ Association of British Columbia, 2020
SCC 20, at para. 66; Tremblay v. Quebec (Commission des affaires sociales), [1992] 1
S.C.R. 952, at p. 966. As three authors note:
[TRANSLATION] It is fair to acknowledge that the principle of openness
does not clearly apply at every stage of a trial. For example, it is difficult
to see what safeguard a high degree of openness could provide when parties
draft their application or when judges deliberate. At certain times during a
trial, secrecy even comes to be thought of as preferable by far if the aim is
to make justice more impartial. On this point, everyone agrees that, at its
various stages, the justice system can live with a certain lack of openness
and can even involve some secrecy.
(R. Perrot, B. Beignier and L. Miniato, Institutions judiciaires (18th ed.
2020), at p. 442)
[56] To summarize, art. 11 C.C.P. gives the public the right to have access to
court records, subject to exceptions for confidential information. This right applies
during and after a proceeding. It allows the public to consult the exhibits filed in the
record, but only if they are in the record at the time it is consulted. The content to which
it gives access is governed in part by art. 108 C.C.P. That provision authorizes the
parties to retrieve their exhibits by consent in the course of a proceeding, and requires
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them to retrieve their exhibits once the proceeding has ended. Even after the proceeding
has ended, the exhibits can be consulted as long as they remain in the record. But once
the parties retrieve them or the court clerk destroys them, they cease to be part of the
record to which the public can have access.
[57] Articles 11 and 108 C.C.P. do not give rise to any judicial discretion. This
is why the Dagenais/Mentuck test should not be used to decide an application under
art. 11 C.C.P. That test was developed in a very different context from the one in
question here, a context in which a comprehensive scheme enacted by Parliament
served as a framework for the principle of openness. Dagenais established that the
discretion to make an order limiting the openness of proceedings must be exercised
within the boundaries set by the Canadian Charter: p. 875. To determine the correct
balance between the competing constitutional rights engaged by this type of order — in
that case, ss. 2(b) and 11(d) of the Canadian Charter — the Court proposed a two-part
test designed to reflect the substance of the test in R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103:
Dagenais, at p. 878. Subsequent decisions have fleshed out the test without changing
the context in which it applies, that is, where a discretion must be exercised and the
court has to seek a correct balance between rights and interests that pull in opposite
directions: Mentuck; Sierra Club; Globe and Mail v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010
SCC 41, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 592. In the absence of such a discretion, the test simply does
not apply: Named Person v. Vancouver Sun, 2007 SCC 43, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 253, at
paras. 35-36; Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. The Queen, 2011 SCC 3, [2011] 1
S.C.R. 65, at para. 13. This is because where the law fixes the scope of the principle of
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open proceedings without conferring any discretion on judges, there is no reason to
seek a correct balance between competing rights and interests that is within the
boundaries set by the Canadian Charter. Given that the constitutionality of arts. 11 and
108 C.C.P. has not been challenged, it is unnecessary to say any more on the subject.
[58] That being said, I will add that the concern expressed by Schrager J.A.
seems entirely legitimate to me: C.A. reasons, at paras. 43-44. I am of the view that if
a motion, supported by persuasive evidence, called the very integrity of the judicial
process directly into question in a context where exhibits had been retrieved from a
record, a different conclusion about the application of the Dagenais/Mentuck test might
be necessary. But such a motion could not be based solely on art. 11 C.C.P.; it would
have to be based on provisions that confer a discretion, such as those dealing with the
courts’ inherent powers: arts. 25 and 49 C.C.P.; Lac d’Amiante, at para. 37. Because
this question does not arise in the present case, however, I will refrain from providing
any definitive answer to it. It is sufficient to note that civil procedure is “flexible”:
Bisaillon v. Concordia University, 2006 SCC 19, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 666, at para. 63. It
therefore does not lack resources to deal with situations that are contrary to the
fundamental principles of our justice system.
[59] Now that the respective scope of arts. 11 and 108 C.C.P. has been defined,
these provisions should be applied to the facts of this case.
B. Is MediaQMI Entitled to Have Access to the Exhibits That Were in the Court
Record at the Time It Filed Its Motion?
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[60] MediaQMI filed its “Motion to unseal” on March 29, 2017. At that time, it
did not know what was in the record for the litigation between Mr. Kamel and the
CIUSSS; it was also unaware of the existence of the exhibits of which it now seeks a
copy, precisely because of the sealing order it was applying to lift. Its motion was not
heard until April 25, 2017. In the meantime, the CIUSSS discontinued its application
and tried to retrieve its exhibits. The only reason it was unable to do so was that the
staff of the court office could not find the record.
[61] That combination of circumstances prompted the CIUSSS, at the hearing
on April 25, 2017, to make the oral request that led to this appeal. The Superior Court’s
judgment [TRANSLATION] “authorizes the CIUSSS to remove Exhibits P-1 to P-4 from
the record”: para. 137. That conclusion certainly had the merit of clarifying the state of
affairs, but it was not, strictly speaking, necessary in law. As I have explained, the rules
set out in art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. do not require any authorization from a court.
[62] The CIUSSS’s discontinuance terminated the proceeding and restored
matters to the state they were in before the application was brought: art. 213 C.C.P.
This means that [TRANSLATION] “[t]he parties’ rights are as they were, as if no court
proceeding had taken place”: H. Maillette, “Incidents qui mettent fin à l’instance”, in
JurisClasseur Québec — Collection droit civil — Procédure civile I (2nd ed.
(loose-leaf)), by P.-C. Lafond, ed., fasc. 21, at No. 9. Because the proceeding had been
terminated, the documents and real evidence filed as exhibits no longer had to remain
in the Superior Court’s record: this is what follows from reading a contrario the first
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of the two rules set out in art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. The second of those rules requires the
parties to retrieve their exhibits within one year. The CIUSSS did not wait that long.
Since it was unable to retrieve its exhibits when it filed its discontinuance, it did so the
day after the Superior Court’s judgment was rendered.
[63] As counsel for the CIUSSS acknowledged in oral argument, the record and
the exhibits in it were accessible to the public during the time between the rendering of
Gagnon J.’s judgment and the CIUSSS’s retrieval of its exhibits (transcript, at p. 55).
This was because the sealing order that had kept the record confidential until then came
to an end when that judgment was rendered. I therefore do not agree with Schrager J.A.
that the effect of the discontinuance was to put the CIUSSS’s exhibits back in the
private sphere through the legal fiction of restoring matters to their former state: C.A.
reasons, at para. 37. That position is contradicted by the undisputed fact that, in spite
of the discontinuance, the exhibits remained accessible to the public between the date
Gagnon J. rendered his judgment and the date they were retrieved from the record; that
position would also create an undesirable imbalance in the way that different methods
of terminating a proceeding affect the openness of records and of their content. It is
unclear why exhibits relating to a proceeding terminated by a discontinuance would be
confidential even before the parties retrieved them, whereas exhibits relating to a
proceeding terminated in a context not involving the legal fiction of restoring matters
to their former state, such as the context of a settlement under art. 220 C.C.P., would
remain public until they were retrieved by the parties.
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[64] In this case, therefore, MediaQMI could have consulted the exhibits in
issue if it had applied for access to the record during the time when the exhibits were
available, since no conservatory measure had been sought by the parties. MediaQMI
did not do so. I agree that these rather unusual circumstances seem to make this case
look like a race against time. But that is not a consequence of the parties’ speed in going
to the office of the Superior Court. It is a consequence of the rules in the Code of Civil
Procedure. The situation would have been the same if the CIUSSS had waited weeks
before retrieving its exhibits and MediaQMI had gone to the court office to consult the
record after the exhibits had already been retrieved. This is because the right to “have
access to court records” set out in art. 11 C.C.P. gives access to the public content of
those records and to the exhibits that are in them at the time they are consulted; it does
not give general access to everything that was ever part of the records.
[65] MediaQMI’s right to “have access to court records” was never
compromised. Only the terms of access to the court record and the content of that record
changed between the filing of the “Motion to unseal” and the retrieval of the exhibits.
However, that situation was beyond the reach of art. 11 because it fell within art. 108
C.C.P.
[66] Like MediaQMI, my colleagues characterize the “Motion to unseal” as an
“application for access to exhibits”. In their view, the fact that such an application was
filed prior to the CIUSSS’s discontinuance is determinative in the analysis. I disagree.
This alone cannot give MediaQMI any [TRANSLATION] “acquired right to argue its
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demand”3 (A.F., at p. 17) within the Dagenais/Mentuck framework. I note as well that
MediaQMI’s application has already been argued, albeit not within the legal framework
it would like. But this is the case only because the Dagenais/Mentuck test did not apply
in the absence of any judicial discretion.
[67] Asserting an acquired right is not enough to make one magically appear.
The filing of a motion under art. 11 C.C.P. does not give the moving party any right to
require that the content of the court record remain unchanged until the motion is
decided. Although my colleagues accept MediaQMI’s arguments on this point, they do
not identify any concrete, individualized legal situation that would have enabled
MediaQMI to acquire a right to argue its application on the basis of the
Dagenais/Mentuck test and, correspondingly, a right to require that the content of the
court record be frozen on the day the application was filed. As I understand their
reasons, they argue rather that because of that pending application, the CIUSSS’s
discontinuance could not be invoked against MediaQMI, which was not a party to the
3 This expression, which my colleagues adopt, comes from the very specific context of Classic Fabrics
Corp. v. B. Rawe GMBH & Co., 2001 CanLII 7221 (Que. C.A.). In that commercial case, a Quebec
company had tried to sue a German company, but the Quebec courts had declined jurisdiction based
on the rules of private international law. The German company had countered by suing the Quebec
company in Quebec, but had filed a discontinuance after the Quebec company tried to amend its
defence to add a cross demand. The discontinuance would have prevented the Quebec company from
having its claim decided by the Quebec courts. Because this was unquestionably prejudicial to the
rights and advantages to which the state of the proceedings had given rise in its favour, the Quebec
company applied to set aside the discontinuance. The Court of Appeal ruled in its favour; it set aside
the discontinuance and allowed the cross demand to be added. Those were the unusual — to say the
least — circumstances that led the court to speak of an [TRANSLATION] “acquired right to argue its
demand, which the [German company] could not prejudice through a discontinuance of its action”
(para. 39). I see nothing in that decision that would establish that any incidental application, even one
that is brought by a person who is not a party to the proceeding and that is unconnected with the
parties’ arguments on the merits, confers a real acquired right to argue the application notwithstanding
the filing of a discontinuance.
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proceeding, with the result that the proceeding did not end with regard to MediaQMI
and that the parties could not raise the effects of art. 108 C.C.P. against it.
[68] With respect, it seems to me that my colleagues’ position takes some
concerning liberties with the statutory language. It takes a roundabout path to avoid the
legal consequence attached by the Code of Civil Procedure to a notice of
discontinuance filed with the court office and notified to the parties. This legal
consequence, which is not conditional on the absence of pending applications, is the
termination of the proceeding: art. 213 C.C.P. Yet the termination of the proceeding
entitles — indeed requires — the parties to retrieve their exhibits: art. 108 C.C.P. The
legal consequence from which the power to retrieve the exhibits in the record arises
can therefore be avoided only by contesting the discontinuance itself.
[69] Again with respect, my colleagues’ line of reasoning is essentially based
on decontextualized quotations from decisions that are contrary to the position they
adopt: reasons of the Chief Justice and Kasirer J., at paras. 109-15 and 139. They
disregard the legal consequence of a discontinuance, even though MediaQMI never
applied to set it aside, on the ground that a unilateral act of renunciation cannot
adversely affect the rights of others. But the sources they rely on for this novel
proposition instead establish that an application to set aside a discontinuance can be
made if the rights of others are adversely affected. If alleging some kind of prejudice
were enough to negate the extinctive effect of a discontinuance on a proceeding, it
would not have been necessary to contest the prejudicial discontinuances in those cases.
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In my view, my colleagues’ reasoning makes all of the jurisprudence flowing from
L’Espérance v. Atkins, [1956] B.R. 62, superfluous and, at the same time, rewrites
art. 213 C.C.P. to dissociate the notice of discontinuance from its legal consequences
for the proceeding under way. I note that their reasoning is also contrary to French law,
under which persons who are not parties to a proceeding must seek to have a
discontinuance set aside if they wish to prevent it from extinguishing the proceeding:4
N. Fricero, “Désistement”, in JurisClasseur France — Procédure civile, by P. Carillon
and R. Perrot, eds., 2018, fasc. 800-40, at No. 105 (available on Lexis/Nexis). Finally,
even if it were assumed that MediaQMI could show that its rights were adversely
affected because it was unable to consult the exhibits in issue, this would not have
resulted from the discontinuance itself: the discontinuance had no effect on the rights
conferred on MediaQMI by art. 11 C.C.P. It would instead have resulted from the
retrieval of the exhibits that followed the discontinuance. This is why, even if, for the
4 French law conceives of discontinuance as [TRANSLATION] “an offer made by the plaintiff to the
defendant, who accepts it, to stop the trial without waiting for the judgment”: J. Vincent and
S. Guinchard, Procédure civile (27th ed. 2003), at p. 878 (emphasis deleted). In principle, the plaintiff
is free [TRANSLATION] “in any matter” to discontinue an application: art. 394 of France’s Nouveau
Code de procédure civile. But the plaintiff’s unilateral manifestation of will is not sufficient to
extinguish the procedural legal relationship created between the parties by the plaintiff’s judicial
application; the discontinuance must also be “perfected” by the defendant’s acceptance. However,
acceptance is “not necessary if the defendant has not pleaded any defence on the merits or peremptory
exception at the time of the plaintiff’s discontinuance”: art. 395. In cases where acceptance is required,
it may be refused only for a legitimate reason: art. 396. Where there are several parties or interveners,
the procedural legal relationship is extinguished only for those who have accepted the discontinuance:
Fricero, “Désistement”, at No. 106. Persons who are not participating in the proceeding, and whose
acceptance is therefore not required by France’s Code de procédure civile, cannot prevent a perfected
discontinuance from extinguishing the procedural legal relationship. But if the discontinuance
adversely affects their rights, they can seek to have it set aside: ibid., at No. 105. Unlike French civil
procedure, Quebec civil procedure does not distinguish between a discontinuance that has been
“perfected” and one that has not. It regards a discontinuance as extinguishing the proceeding, but it
allows the discontinuance to be set aside if there is prejudice to the rights of a party (Atkins; 175809
Canada inc. v. 2740478 Canada inc., 2000 CanLII 9254 (Que. C.A.)) or a third person (such as a child
in whose interests a judge must rule under art. 33 of the Civil Code of Québec: Droit de la famille —
092038, 2009 QCCS 3822, [2009] R.D.F. 646).
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purposes of discussion, my colleagues’ reasoning were to be accepted, it would not
lead to the conclusion that the CIUSSS’s discontinuance prejudiced MediaQMI’s
rights.
[70] In short, the discontinuance of a proceeding is not a unilateral act of
renunciation like any other. Because it is a way of forgoing a trial, it nullifies the
parties’ procedural legal relationship arising from the judicial application. This
explains why a defendant or intervener can contest a discontinuance that is prejudicial
to it. The situation is different for a third person whose rights and interests are not
affected by the parties’ arguments on the merits. Prima facie, the extinguishment of the
procedural legal relationship has no effect on that person. If prejudiced by it for any
reason, the third person may apply to set aside the discontinuance. In this case, if
MediaQMI wanted to prevent the exercise of the power given by art. 108 C.C.P. to the
parties to a terminated proceeding, it had to contest the discontinuance extinguishing
the proceeding. It did not do so. There was therefore nothing that prohibited the
CIUSSS from retrieving its exhibits.
[71] I also note that my colleagues do not explain how remanding the case to
the Superior Court “so that it can decide the application for access to the exhibits in
accordance with the applicable law” (that is, in their view, in accordance with the
Dagenais/Mentuck test) would help MediaQMI access exhibits that were retrieved
from the record the day after the Superior Court’s judgment was rendered: para. 143.
In light of the Code of Civil Procedure, and given that MediaQMI’s motion was based
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on a provision giving it the right to have access to a court record, I fail to see how the
motion would enable it to consult exhibits that had in fact already been retrieved from
the record in accordance with art. 108 C.C.P. Although counsel for the CIUSSS agreed
as a courtesy to keep a copy of the exhibits until the case was over, he did so “[w]ithout
prejudice” and “without any admission” (A.R., at pp. 82 and 85): this did not create
any legal fiction that would make it possible to proceed as if the exhibits had never
been retrieved. Finally, I note that my colleagues’ position departs from what
MediaQMI has asked this Court to do, which is to declare that the exhibits that were
once in the record are public and to order the CIUSSS to provide it with a copy of them.
I agree with Schrager J.A. that MediaQMI is confusing the access to information
mechanisms and the principle of open proceedings: C.A. reasons, at para. 44.
[72] I therefore conclude that MediaQMI cannot obtain a copy of the exhibits
that were in the Superior Court’s record at the time its “Motion to unseal” was filed.
VII. Conclusion
[73] For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
English version of the reasons of Wagner C.J. and Rowe, Martin and Kasirer JJ.
delivered by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE AND KASIRER J. —
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I. Introduction
[74] We have had the advantage of reading the reasons of our colleague Côté J.
We agree with her that the right to have access to court records arising from the
principle of open court proceedings, which is set out in art. 11 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, CQLR, c. C-25.01 (“C.C.P.”), does not confer a right to access exhibits
once they have been validly removed by the parties or destroyed by the court clerk.
However, with respect, we differ with her on the outcome of this appeal. Our
disagreement concerns the time at which it should be determined whether the exhibits
are in the court record. In our opinion, the state of the record must be assessed at the
time the appellant asserted its right to have access to the exhibits.
[75] In this case, the respondent Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de
services sociaux de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal (“CIUSSS”) — the plaintiff in the
principal litigation — filed a judicial application alleging misappropriation of public
funds by the respondent Magdi Kamel. In a proceeding conducted ex parte, that is, in
the absence of the other party, the CIUSSS obtained an order from a judge sealing its
application and the exhibits filed in support of it. The appellant, a publisher of daily
newspapers and not a party to the principal litigation, applied for access to the exhibits,
relying on art. 11 C.C.P. and freedom of the press. It did so while the exhibits were in
the court record. The CIUSSS subsequently discontinued its judicial application.
[76] While the law authorizes a plaintiff to discontinue an action at any time,
we are of the view that such a procedure cannot allow the plaintiff to circumvent an
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application already brought against it for access to sealed exhibits. From the moment
the appellant applied to unseal the court record and have access to the exhibits, the
litigation took on a different colour. A second proceeding arose, connected to but
distinct from the principal litigation. It not only concerned the plaintiff, the defendant
and their private dispute, but was also of concern to the public and, it should be
emphasized, the judiciary itself. If the plaintiff’s discontinuance had the effect of
preventing the appellant from having access to the court record, it would interfere with
the proper functioning of the judicial institution, the legitimacy of which depends on
its openness and, as we know, on media scrutiny. Once the appellant applied to unseal
the record, the exhibits covered by its application were necessarily part of that new
proceeding, which meant that the parties no longer had control over them while the
matter was being argued.
[77] Said respectfully, this appeal cannot be reduced to a routine application of
a rule set out in the Code of Civil Procedure; it concerns matters well beyond the strict
confines of art. 108 C.C.P., which allows parties to litigation to remove their exhibits
from the court record on certain conditions. The dispute highlights the need to reconcile
competing principles: first, the openness of court proceedings (art. 11 C.C.P.), a rule
of public order to which courts may make exceptions (art. 12 C.C.P.), and second, the
parties’ “control [over] the course of their case” (maîtrise de leur dossier), including
the power to terminate a proceeding at any time (art. 19 C.C.P.). Where a member of
the public — here, the publisher of the daily newspapers Le Journal de Montréal and
Le Journal de Québec — challenges a sealing order and seeks access to a court record,
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prior to a discontinuance and while the exhibits are still in the record, these two
principles must be reconciled. In our view, the plaintiff’s ability to discontinue an
action cannot deprive the appellant, in the circumstances of this case, of its right to
argue its motion for access to the exhibits in the record and, if the court grants that
motion, of its right to have access to the record. The parties’ control over the course of
their case may not be exercised contrary to the existing and legitimate interests of a
third person, let alone contrary to a rule of public order requiring that civil justice
administered by the courts be public.
[78] Accordingly, for the reasons that follow, we would allow the appeal and
remand the case to the Superior Court so that it can decide the merits of MediaQMI’s
application for access to exhibits on the basis of the analytical framework established
in Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, and R. v. Mentuck,
2001 SCC 76, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442, which was affirmed for civil proceedings in Sierra
Club of Canada v. Canada (Minister of Finance), 2002 SCC 41, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 522.
II. Background
[79] On October 6, 2016, the CIUSSS filed a legal action seeking an award of
$510,266 against one of its former managers, Mr. Kamel, for alleged misappropriation
of public funds earmarked for health services. In its judicial application, the CIUSSS
alleged that Mr. Kamel had used a [TRANSLATION] “scheme” to steal public funds
intended for health care from the CIUSSS and the hospital it ran. Among other things,
the CIUSSS stated the following:
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[TRANSLATION] By virtue of the position he held and the trust placed
in him, Kamel fraudulently obtained reimbursement for personal expenses
unrelated to the activities of [St. Mary’s Hospital Center], thereby
misappropriating a total of $410,266 during the period of April 1, 2009 to
March 31, 2015 (“Period”), by taking advantage of loopholes in the
implementation of the CIUSSS/SMHC policies on the reimbursement of
expenses, as can be seen more fully from the PwC report (see section 4 for
a summary of PwC’s findings);
Two main modus operandi were used by Kamel: (A) expense claims
with no voucher attached, and (B) expense claims with certain vouchers
attached that, upon analysis, proved to be unfounded;
(A.R., at p. 37)
[80] In its application, the CIUSSS stated that it had hired the PwC firm to get
to the bottom of the irregularities alleged against Mr. Kamel. Claiming reimbursement
of the amounts supposedly stolen by Mr. Kamel, the CIUSSS filed four exhibits in
support of its application, including a confidential forensic accounting investigation
report prepared by PwC.
[81] It should be noted that Mr. Kamel was initially suspended and that he
ultimately resigned from his managerial position with the CIUSSS before the
proceedings were filed. His resignation letter was also one of the exhibits filed in
support of the CIUSSS’s application.
[82] In connection with its action, the CIUSSS filed an application for a
Norwich order against a financial institution in order to obtain bank records concerning
Mr. Kamel. The fraud allegations made against Mr. Kamel were based mainly on the
forensic accounting investigation report prepared by PwC. We note that the CIUSSS is
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a legal person established in the public interest and “is responsible for ensuring the
development and smooth operation of th[e] local health and social services networks”
(Act to modify the organization and governance of the health and social services
network, in particular by abolishing the regional agencies, CQLR, c. O-7.2, s. 38)
crucial services provided to the public in Quebec.
[83] On October 7, 2016, the Superior Court made a Norwich order. It ordered
that the entire record be sealed for a period of 120 days, which was later extended until
April 18, 2017.
[84] On March 29, 2017, the appellant filed an application for access to the
court record entitled [TRANSLATION] “Motion to unseal”, relying in part on art. 11
C.C.P. Noting that it published daily newspapers in Montréal and Québec, the appellant
stated in its motion that it was “entitled to have access to the Court’s record, in
accordance with art. 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure and s. 23 of the Charter of
human rights and freedoms [CQLR, c. C-12 (“Quebec Charter”)], pursuant to the
principle of accessibility of the Court’s records, the openness of court proceedings, and
freedom of the press and its corollary, news gathering” (A.R., at p. 50).
[85] The conclusions sought by the appellant were set out as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
GRANT this Motion;
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TERMINATE any order whose purpose is to restrict the access of the
public and the Applicant to the Court record for file 500-17-095861-160.
WITHOUT LEGAL COSTS unless this Motion is contested. [Emphasis
added.]
(A.R., at p. 51)
[86] The appellant specified at para. 7 of its motion that it was seeking access
to the record, including the exhibits filed in it:
[TRANSLATION] . . . obtain access to the Court’s record, including but not
limited to the Originating Application, the various pleadings that followed,
and the exhibits that may have been filed by the parties. [Emphasis added.]
(A.R., at p. 50)
The objective behind the conclusions sought is therefore plain.
[87] The notice of presentation indicated that the motion was to be heard on
April 5, 2017. On that date, counsel for the CIUSSS asked the Superior Court to
postpone the hearing to April 18, the date on which the order sealing the record and
making it confidential was to expire. Because counsel for the appellant was not
available on April 18, the respondents and the appellant agreed that the matter would
be argued on April 25 and the order was renewed until that date.
[88] On April 19, 2017 — more than three weeks after MediaQMI filed its
motion to unseal and to obtain the pleadings and exhibits — the CIUSSS discontinued
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its judicial application. During the days that followed, the CIUSSS tried unsuccessfully
to remove the exhibits filed in the court record, but the record could not be found.
[89] Two days later, on April 21, 2017, Mr. Kamel applied to withdraw the
originating application or, in the alternative, to have it sealed. That proceeding was not
contested by the CIUSSS, but MediaQMI opposed it, relying once again on the open
court principle and freedom of the press.
[90] The matter was heard on April 25, 2017. At that time, the CIUSSS made a
request to retrieve the exhibits, notably Exhibit P-1, the forensic accounting
investigation report by PwC. The appellant objected to that request, noting that the
purpose of its motion was not only to unseal the record but also to obtain the exhibits
that were in it at that time. At the hearing, counsel for the appellant expressly reiterated
the request for access to the exhibits:
[TRANSLATION] With respect, what I am telling you is . . . that a right
was crystallized. The exhibits are in the record. We were there, [we]
applied in a timely manner while the exhibits were in the record. It would
be unfair to turn around today and say: “Well, I’m removing the exhibits”
even though we had . . . we have a constitutional right to access.
(A.R., at p. 165)
[91] On July 20, 2017, the Superior Court judge ordered that the record be
unsealed. However, the judge did not decide the appellant’s application for access to
exhibits, as he found that parties have [TRANSLATION] “complete freedom to remove
all exhibits from the record and to shield them from public scrutiny” once a proceeding
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is terminated by a discontinuance (2017 QCCS 4691, at para. 119 (CanLII)). He
therefore authorized the CIUSSS to remove the exhibits filed in the record, but held
that, under the Code of Civil Procedure, the originating application had to remain in
the record (para. 121). On July 21, 2017, the CIUSSS removed the exhibits from the
court record. Counsel for the CIUSSS kept a copy of the exhibits until such time as the
appellant’s appeal was decided or settled (A.R., at pp. 82-85).
[92] The majority of the Court of Appeal dismissed MediaQMI’s appeal (2019
QCCA 814). Marcotte J.A., dissenting, would have allowed the appeal, set aside the
judgment of the Superior Court and referred the case back to that court so that it could
decide the application for access to exhibits.
III. Applicable Legal Framework
A. Parties’ Control Over the Course of the Case and Openness of Proceedings
[93] This appeal provides the Court with an opportunity to consider the
interplay between some general principles of Quebec civil procedure. The principles in
question in this case are as follows: first, the principle that the parties have control over
the course of their case, including the essential right to resolve their disputes in private,
free from public scrutiny; second, the principle of open court proceedings, a principle
of public order based on the transparency of justice and, correlatively, on public access
to what takes place in the courts. When there is tension between these principles, as in
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this case, it will of course be important to identify a manner in which they might be
reconciled.
[94] The Code of Civil Procedure contains principles that circumscribe the
application and interpretation of the rules it sets out. In 2001, the Civil Procedure
Review Committee proposed that the principles of the precedence of substantive law
over procedure, the adversarial process, control over the course of cases and
proceedings, judicial intervention to ensure the orderly conduct of proceedings, the
openness of proceedings and the proportionality of proceedings be grouped together
[TRANSLATION] “[t]o emphasize them and ensure their primacy” (Une nouvelle culture
judiciaire (2001), at p. 38, cited in Charland v. Lessard, 2015 QCCA 14, at para. 169
(CanLII)). These principles are now gathered together in arts. 8 to 28 C.C.P. under the
title “Principles of procedure applicable before the courts”, which has four chapters:
mission of the courts, public nature of procedure before the courts, guiding principles
of procedure, and rules of interpretation and application of the Code.
[95] The parties’ control over the course of their case is a guiding principle set
out in art. 19 C.C.P. The parties thus have a [TRANSLATION] “circumscribe[d]” freedom
to choose the appropriate proceedings and the grounds of fact and law they will raise
(Ministère de la Justice, Commentaires de la ministre de la Justice: Code de procédure
civile, chapitre C-25.01 (2015), art. 19; Imperial Oil v. Jacques, 2014 SCC 66, [2014]
3 S.C.R. 287, at para. 25). This principle extends to the parties’ right to agree “at any
stage of the proceeding” to settle their dispute or otherwise terminate the proceeding
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(para. 3). They may therefore decide to remove their dispute from the judicial arena in
order to resolve it privately.
[96] This ability to withdraw a case from the courts is consistent with the
general approach taken by the Code of Civil Procedure, which places a [TRANSLATION]
“spectacularly” high value on private civil justice (C. Piché, “La disposition
préliminaire du Code de procédure civile” (2014), 73 R. du B. 135, at p. 152). As its
preliminary provision indicates, the Code of Civil Procedure “is designed to provide,
in the public interest, means to prevent and resolve disputes”, and it sets out general
principles in this regard in arts. 1 to 7. In this way, the legislature expressly recognizes
that when parties enter into a dispute prevention and resolution process by mutual
agreement, civil justice is possible, even desirable, without the intervention of the
courts. Facilitating the resolution of disputes is a public objective of undeniable
importance, both for the parties and for our overburdened justice system (Union
Carbide Canada Inc. v. Bombardier Inc., 2014 SCC 35, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 800, at
para. 32; L. Chamberland, ed., Le grand collectif: Code de procédure civile —
Commentaires et annotations, vol. 1, Articles 1 à 390 (5th ed. 2020), at p. 9). Private
dispute resolution processes have several advantages, including [TRANSLATION] “their
confidentiality, their more informal nature, their flexibility, better conflict management
by the parties, lower costs and the possibility of arriving at individualized solutions”
(P.-C. Lafond, “Introduction”, in P.-C. Lafond, ed., Régler autrement les différends
(2nd ed. 2018), 1, at p. 20; see also M. Thériault, “Le défi du passage vers la nouvelle
culture juridique de la justice participative” (2015), 74 R. du B. 1, at pp. 9-12).
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[97] However, the parties’ control over the course of their case is not absolute:
it cannot be exercised contrary to rules of public order or to the existing and legitimate
interests of third persons. In exercising this power, the parties must “comply with the
principles, objectives and rules of procedure” (art. 19 para. 1 C.C.P.). The latitude
given to the parties in conducting the proceeding is therefore limited by the general
principles of civil procedure, including the rules found in the Code of Civil Procedure,
which confer on judges a role as [TRANSLATION] “protectors of the judicial process and
the various parties’ rights” (J. Plamondon, “Les principes directeurs et le nouveau Code
de procédure civile (art. 17 à 24 C.p.c.)”, in S. Guillemard, ed., Le Code de procédure
civile: quelles nouveautés? (2016), 27, at pp. 38-39). As Professor Piché notes, the
Code of Civil Procedure [TRANSLATION] “gives the judge’s duties priority over the
parties’ rights” (p. 166). Having chosen to go before the courts, the parties must
therefore comply with the established rules and principles.
[98] The parties’ control over the course of their case, for example, is subject to
the “duty of the courts to ensure proper case management and the orderly conduct of
proceedings” (art. 19 para. 1 C.C.P.). The courts are therefore required to play an active
role in the management of cases, thereby incidentally limiting the parties’ control over
the conduct of a proceeding (F. Bachand, “Les principes généraux de la justice civile
et le nouveau Code de procédure civile” (2015), 61 McGill L.J. 447, at p. 458;
Homans v. Gestion Paroi inc., 2017 QCCA 480, at paras. 92-93 (CanLII)). The
principle of proportionality set out in art. 18 C.C.P. is also a good example of a
restriction on [TRANSLATION] “the parties’ freedom to conduct their case as they see
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fit” (J.G. v. Nadeau, 2016 QCCA 167, at para. 40 (CanLII); see also Y.-M. Morissette,
“Gestion d’instance, proportionnalité et preuve civile: état provisoire des questions”
(2009), 50 C. de D. 381, at p. 412). In short, the parties can have only [TRANSLATION]
“incomplete” control over the course of the case given the interplay between that
control and the competing and divergent principles set out in the Code of Civil
Procedure (see D. Ferland and B. Emery, Précis de procédure civile du Québec (6th
ed. 2020), vol. 1, at No. 1-164). S. Guillemard and S. Menétrey conclude from this that,
especially since the enactment of the new 2016 Code of Civil Procedure,
[TRANSLATION] “a kind of dilution” of the power given to the parties to control the
course of their case may be observed, in comparison with the “lead role” they had prior
to the revision (Comprendre la procédure civile québécoise (2nd ed. 2017), at
No. 100).
[99] Similarly, the parties’ control over the course of their case does not allow
them to override the judge’s discretion to ensure compliance with the rule of public
order arising from the principle of open proceedings, nor does it allow them to exercise
their powers at the expense of the existing and legitimate interests of third persons in
seeking the application of that rule. This fundamental principle is affirmed in art. 11
C.C.P., which provides that anyone may attend court hearings and have access to court
records. This principle also guarantees rights protected in ss. 3 and 23 of the Quebec
Charter and s. 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (see, e.g., Lac
d’Amiante du Québec Ltée v. 2858-0702 Québec Inc., 2001 SCC 51, [2001] 2 S.C.R.
743, at para. 62; Globe and Mail v. Canada (Attorney General), 2010 SCC 41, [2010]
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2 S.C.R. 592, at para. 87). As the Court reiterated in Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Harkat, 2014 SCC 37, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 33, the openness of court
proceedings is an important hallmark of a free and democratic society such as ours
(para. 24).
[100] In the chapter entitled “Public nature of procedure before the courts”, the
legislature provides for two specific exceptions to this fundamental principle. First,
art. 11 para. 2 C.C.P. states that an exception to this principle applies if the law provides
for in camera proceedings (art. 15 C.C.P.) or restricts access to court records (art. 16
C.C.P.), which is notably the case in family matters (see Ferland and Emery, at
Nos. 1-108 and 1-109). In the absence of a constitutional challenge, these limits on
openness in family matters may not be disturbed. Second, art. 12 C.C.P. provides for a
so-called “judicial” exception by codifying the principles established by this Court in
Sierra Club, thereby giving the court a discretion to make an exception to the
fundamental principle of open proceedings “if, in its opinion, public order . . . or the
protection of substantial and legitimate interests [so] requires” (see Commentaires de
la ministre de la Justice, art. 12).
[101] Important though it may be, the parties’ control over the course of their
case does not extend so far as to allow them to directly or indirectly shield the content
of their record from public scrutiny and thereby circumvent the fundamental principle
of open proceedings. As Baudouin J.A. explained in B. (B.) v. Québec (Procureur
général), [1998] R.J.Q. 317 (C.A.), this principle is of public order and [TRANSLATION]
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“the courts, the guardians of public order, have not only the right but the strict duty to
intervene proprio motu to uphold it” (p. 320). This is why parties cannot agree to take
part in judicial proceedings anonymously or to have a record sealed. Such an agreement
could not bind the court and oblige it to disregard a rule of public order (see, e.g.,
Rosei v. Benesty, 2020 QCCS 1795, at paras. 97-100 (CanLII); Marcovitz v. Bruker,
2005 QCCA 835, [2005] R.J.Q. 2482, at paras. 109-10, rev’d on other grounds, 2007
SCC 54, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 607). A court seized of an application under art. 12 C.C.P. to
limit the openness of court proceedings must exercise its discretion in accordance with
the analytical framework developed in Dagenais, Mentuck and Sierra Club, even if the
application is unopposed (see, e.g., Mentuck, at para. 38; Sirius Services conseils en
technologie de l’information inc. v. Boisvert, 2017 QCCA 518, at para. 4 (CanLII);
Horic v. Nepveu, 2016 QCCS 3921, at para. 166 (CanLII)).
[102] The public, and in particular the news media, have the interest required to
seek the application of the principle of open proceedings set out in art. 11 C.C.P., and
thereby put the rights guaranteed by the Quebec and Canadian charters into play. As
Cory J. noted in Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attorney General), [1989] 2 S.C.R.
1326, “members of the public have a right to information pertaining to public
institutions and particularly the courts” (p. 1339). As “surrogates for the public”, the
media therefore play a vital role in the exercise of this right (p. 1360, per Wilson J.,
citing Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia, 448 U.S. 555 (1980), at p. 573). For
example, in 3834310 Canada Inc. v. R.C., 2004 CanLII 4122 (Que. C.A.), the Court of
Appeal recognized that the interests of the press are affected by a judgment authorizing
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a party to institute a proceeding anonymously. The appellant, a daily newspaper
publisher, could avail itself of the rules on revocation of a judgment on application by
a third person (art. 349 C.C.P.), because the impugned judgment affected its interests
with respect to the openness of proceedings and the public’s right to be informed
(paras. 13, 18 and 33).
[103] When parties decide to have recourse to the civil justice system, which is a
public service, they do so knowing that members of the public may exercise their
fundamental right to information about court proceedings. It is true that public scrutiny
may encourage parties to prevent or resolve a dispute, including by withdrawing a case
from the courts. However, this form of incentive alone cannot ipso facto supplant the
principle of open proceedings when invoked in accordance with procedural rules while
a proceeding is still under way. On the other hand, where parties opt for a private
resolution process, the principle of open proceedings does not apply and, as a general
rule, the confidentiality “of anything said, written or done during the process” must be
preserved (art. 4 C.C.P.).
[104] It is important to emphasize that the fundamental principle of open
proceedings is not concerned solely with scrutiny of judicial action, as the respondents
argue, but also extends to the subject matter of disputes. Article 11 C.C.P. expressly
provides that “[a]nyone may . . . have access to court records and entries in the registers
of the courts”. In Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. The Queen, 2011 SCC 3, [2011]
1 S.C.R. 65, this Court in fact explained that “[a]ccess to exhibits is a corollary to the
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open court principle” (para. 12). The media and members of the public do not have to
justify their presence at court hearings or their desire to consult a court record. The
burden of satisfying the criteria set out in Dagenais, Mentuck and Sierra Club lies on
the party applying for an order to limit the principle of open proceedings (Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 480, at
para. 71).
[105] In short, it is true that the parties control the course of their case and that
they may terminate a proceeding at any time. However, this power exists in a context
where civil justice before the courts is, in principle, open and where the public and the
media can seek the application of this fundamental principle during the course of a
proceeding.
B. Article 213 C.C.P.: Discontinuance and Its Limits
[106] The principle that the parties’ control over the course of their case may not
be exercised contrary to the rules of public order and the existing and legitimate
interests of third persons is also based on the jurisprudence relating specifically to the
effect of a discontinuance, which is dealt with in the Code as an incidental proceeding
that terminates a civil action.
[107] Article 213 C.C.P. provides that a plaintiff’s discontinuance of an
application terminates the proceeding and “restores matters to their former state”. In
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principle, art. 213 C.C.P. therefore entitles a party to discontinue a judicial application
unilaterally at any time (see, e.g., Georgiadis v. Angelopoulos, 2008 QCCS 6890, at
para. 8 (CanLII), per Gascon J.). The rules on discontinuance flow from the principle
that the parties control the course of their case (art. 19 para. 3 C.C.P.). To be set up
against the other parties, the unilateral discontinuance need only be notified to those
parties in accordance with art. 213.
[108] This being the case, it is often said, and properly so, that the right of
discontinuance is not absolute (see, e.g., Classic Fabrics Corp. v. B. Rawe GMBH &
Co., 2001 CanLII 7221 (Que. C.A.), at para. 38). First of all, when a plaintiff
discontinues an application, it does so only for itself; in the case of a joint application,
art. 214 C.C.P. provides that the other plaintiff may continue the proceeding. We would
add that, as a general rule, a discontinuance has no effect on a cross-application made
by the defendant. The Court of Appeal explained this in 175809 Canada inc. v.
2740478 Canada inc., 2000 CanLII 9254, before the recent reform of civil procedure:
[TRANSLATION] Technically, “[d]iscontinuance replaces matters in the
state in which they would have been had the suit to which it applies not
been commenced” (art. 264 C.C.P.). This is an outcome that cannot be
achieved where the proceeding sought to be discontinued is itself a source
of damages. While a litigant may be authorized to discontinue an action at
any time, this procedure cannot be used to avoid a suit already brought
against it. A claim for damages is analogous to a cross demand. It subsists
notwithstanding the discontinuance of the principal action. [Emphasis
added; para. 6.]
[109] The principle that the parties control the course of their case is therefore
subject to a qualification, developed and consistently applied by the courts: a
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discontinuance may not prejudice the rights of the other parties or of third persons,
including the right to have an application filed prior to the discontinuance decided. In
L’Espérance v. Atkins, [1956] B.R. 62, Pratte J. explained this qualification by saying
that a discontinuance involves a renunciation by the plaintiff of its own rights. As a
result, it may not be effected to the prejudice of third persons’ rights:
[TRANSLATION] The word “discontinuance” conveys the idea of
renouncing some right or withdrawing a case or proceeding. But because
only one’s own rights can be renounced, the discontinuance of a
proceeding that has given rise to rights for others should not be permitted:
discontinuance may not be effected to the prejudice of third persons’ rights.
[Emphasis added; p. 66.]
[110] In Graham-Albulet v. Albulet, [1977] C.A. 323, at p. 324, the Court of
Appeal confirmed the existence of this intrinsic limit on the effects of a discontinuance:
[TRANSLATION] Discontinuance is therefore a renunciation of a right, an
advantage, which presupposes that this right, this advantage, belongs to the
person who purports to renounce it, for it is not possible, through a
unilateral act, to renounce for others and deprive them of a right or
advantage they possess. [Emphasis added.]
[111] This qualification of the effects of a discontinuance makes sense.
Discontinuance constitutes a [TRANSLATION] “voluntary renunciation of a right, of a
claim” (H. Reid, with S. Reid, Dictionnaire de droit québécois et canadien (5th ed.
2015), at p. 206, “désistement” (discontinuance)). The renunciation of a right allows
the holder to relinquish the right if it is no longer wanted, which presupposes that the
holder has full disposition of the right it intends to give up (see, generally, M. Lamothe,
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La renonciation à l’exercice des droits et libertés garantis par les chartes (2007), at
p. 10). Since this is a unilateral act by the renouncing party, only that party’s will is
needed for the act to produce legal effects (Lamothe, at p. 10; D. Lluelles and
B. Moore, Droit des obligations (3rd ed. 2018), at No. 256). If art. 213 C.C.P. seems
to provide that a plaintiff is free to discontinue an application, this is because, in
principle, [TRANSLATION] “those who wish to relinquish a right can do so without the
need for anyone’s approval, because they are prejudicing only themselves” (see, on the
concept of renunciation, P. Raynaud, “La renonciation à un droit: Sa nature et son
domaine en Droit civil” (1936), 35 R.T.D. civ. 763, at p. 773).
[112] This idea of renunciation shows that a discontinuance affects only the
rights of the renouncing party, that is, the party that discontinues proceedings or waives
a right or claim. Given that it is not possible to renounce the rights of others, the
renouncing party [TRANSLATION] “affects only its own legal sphere through its act,
without having any effect on that of others” (Lamothe, at p. 11, fn. 47, citing
G. Grammatikas, Théorie générale de la renonciation en droit civil (1971), at p. 11;
see also F. Dreifuss-Netter, Les manifestations de volonté abdicatives (1985), at pp. 31
and 103). In other words, a party may validly renounce a right or claim, but this
unilateral act does not affect the rights of third persons. A discontinuance may therefore
be valid yet ineffective against the rights of third persons (Barzelex Inc. v. M.E.C.S.
International Inc. (1989), 29 Q.A.C. 63, at para. 22; Constructions Panthéon inc. v.
Clinique Altermed inc., 2015 QCCA 50, at paras. 4, 12 and 15-16 (CanLII); Taran Furs
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(Mtl) inc. v. Tuac, local 501, 2005 CanLII 11669 (Que. Sup. Ct.), at paras. 30-32 and
59-60, per Gascon J.).
[113] This principle has been applied on a number of occasions to recognize that
courts remain seized of pending incidental applications — including cross-applications
— for damages, for dismissal or for a declaration that a judicial application or pleading
is abusive, even where the party bringing the initial application later discontinues it
(see, e.g., 175809 Canada inc., at para. 6; Constructions Panthéon, at paras. 10-12;
Taran Furs; 7006098 Canada inc. v. Sobeys Canada inc., 2020 QCCS 897, at paras. 37
and 43 (CanLII)). In such a case, the discontinuance cannot adversely affect the right
to argue an application before a court and to have it decided by the court. As Justice
Louis-Philippe Pigeon explained, writing extra-judicially, “[e]ven in the realm of
procedure, vested rights exist. A person who has instituted proceedings before a court
has a vested right to the competence of the court” (Drafting and Interpreting
Legislation (1988), at p. 79).
[114] Classic Fabrics is an instructive example of this limit on the right of
discontinuance. The defendant had filed a motion to amend its defence and make a
cross demand. The plaintiff had then discontinued its claim and argued that it had
terminated the proceeding. The Court of Appeal set aside the discontinuance and held,
at paras. 38-39, that it could not adversely affect the defendant’s acquired right to argue
its cross demand:
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[TRANSLATION] The right of discontinuance is not absolute, however. A
party may not use it to prejudice rights or advantages that another party
may have acquired under the law or as a result of proceedings instituted.
At the time the appellant served the respondent with its motion to amend
its pleading in order to add a cross demand, the state of the proceedings
allowed the appellant to present that motion. The appellant had an acquired
right to argue its demand, which the respondent could not prejudice
through a discontinuance of its action. [Emphasis added.]
(On the acquired right to argue an application, see also Berenbaum v.
Berenbaum Reichson, 2014 QCCA 1630, at para. 15 (CanLII);
Constructions Panthéon, at para. 12.)
[115] Accordingly, the purpose or effect of a party’s discontinuance cannot be
“to avoid a suit already brought against it” (175809 Canada inc., at para. 6). In such
circumstances, the court may take note of the discontinuance but should declare that it
cannot cause the loss of rights claimed through a prior motion that is pending (see, e.g.,
Taran Furs, at paras. 30-32 and 59-60).
[116] It is in fact entirely coherent that a discontinuance cannot defeat an
application filed prior to it, because in principle, renunciation does not have retroactive
effects. It [TRANSLATION] “produces its effects from the moment it is made. In other
words, the effects of renunciation are produced ex nunc and do not reach into the past”
(Grammatikas, at p. 147).
C. Article 108 C.C.P.: Removal of Exhibits and Its Limits
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[117] The second paragraph of art. 108 C.C.P. provides that exhibits filed in the
record must remain in the record until the end of the proceeding. They may be removed
in two situations: (1) at the end of the proceeding, by the parties that filed them; and
(2) with the consent of all the parties.
[118] In the present case, the parties and the courts below attached great
importance to the nature of this rule. Upon reading the judgment under appeal, we note
that two of the Court of Appeal judges concluded that art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. sets out a
rule of an administrative nature (para. 42, per Schrager J.A.; para. 54, per
Marcotte J.A.). It is true that the wording of this paragraph and the parliamentary
debates preceding its enactment confirm that its purpose is to reduce the costs of the
justice system (National Assembly, “Adoption du principe — Projet de loi 24 — Loi
modifiant le Code de procédure civile”, Journal des débats, vol. 33, No. 30, 3rd Sess.,
34th Leg., June 1, 1994, at pp. 1573-79, Roger Lefebvre, Minister of Justice). We take
note of the differing reading of art. 108 C.C.P. proposed by our colleague. However,
for the purposes of this appeal, it is not necessary to decide this question. Even
assuming that art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. sets out a substantive rule, the parties cannot make
use of this provision in a manner that adversely affects acquired rights given the
circumstances of the discontinuance, which occurred after MediaQMI filed its
application to unseal and to access the Superior Court’s record.
[119] It follows that, in the circumstances, the logic behind qualifying the
principle that the parties control the course of the case also applies, by extension, to the
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removal of exhibits under art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. If the discontinuance of a proceeding
cannot be relied on at the expense of third persons’ existing legitimate interests or
contrary to the rules of public order, including the openness of court proceedings, then
parties cannot avail themselves of art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. in order to remove exhibits
from the record after an application has been made under art. 11 C.C.P. As art. 19
C.C.P. provides, the control that the parties have over the course of their case must be
exercised in compliance with the principles of civil procedure.
[120] As the cases considered above show, parties may not infringe rules of
public order like that of the openness of proceedings, even on consent (see, e.g.,
Marcovitz). They certainly do not “control the course of their case” to such an extent
that they can circumvent a rule of public order, including through the actions they can
take with respect to exhibits under art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. The judicial process cannot
condone a form of private justice in which parties decide between themselves how a
court proceeding will be conducted without regard for the open court principle. In short,
the parties cannot displace a rule of public order by mutual consent (see, e.g.,
Berenbaum, at para. 16, citing Entreprises de béton Fern Leclerc Ltée v. Bourassa,
[1990] R.D.J. 558 (C.A.), at p. 561).
[121] The right to remove exhibits that are in a court record with the consent of
all parties must also be interpreted in the same way as the unilateral right to discontinue
an application: it cannot adversely affect the existing and legitimate interests of third
persons. For example, the Superior Court recognized in a family law case that a
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discontinuance by the plaintiff that adversely affected a child’s rights could be set aside
even though the defendant had consented to it (Droit de la famille — 092038, 2009
QCCS 3822, [2009] R.D.F. 646, at paras. 14-15 and 34). In other words, because it is
not possible to renounce the rights of others, a discontinuance, whether unilateral or by
mutual consent, cannot defeat a third person’s rights.
[122] The reason why art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P. makes the right to remove exhibits
in the court record subject to the consent of all the parties is that, in principle, the
removal of exhibits affects only the parties, as it may deprive them of relevant exhibits
in support of their arguments. Where only the parties have a legitimate interest in the
exhibits, their decision to remove them by mutual consent does not prejudice anyone.
In such a case, they have complete freedom to remove the exhibits from the record,
including in order to protect the confidentiality of the documents involved (Sirius, at
para. 4). The purpose of the consent requirement in this situation is to ensure that the
removal of exhibits does not have prejudicial effects. In fact, as long as the unilateral
removal of an exhibit is not prejudicial to the other parties, this breach of the obligation
to obtain the consent of all the parties cannot be fatal (Wetherall v. Macdonald (1903),
9 R. de J. 381 (Sup. Ct.), at p. 383).
[123] The situation is entirely different where the removal of exhibits, even by
mutual consent, infringes a rule of public order or adversely affects an existing and
legitimate interest of a third person. If a party’s discontinuance cannot unilaterally
extinguish the right of others to advance their applications, it would be inconsistent if
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parties could, even by mutual consent, “renounce for others and deprive them of a right
or advantage they possess” (Graham-Albulet, at p. 324).
[124] Moreover, the Court of Appeal has recognized that the principle that
procedural acts may not prejudice the rights of a party or a third person who has already
brought an application also obtains where a pleading is withdrawn or amended under
art. 206 C.C.P. (9163-5771 Québec inc. v. Bonifier inc., 2017 QCCA 1316, at para. 43
(CanLII)). This principle running through the Code of Civil Procedure therefore
clarifies the scope of the right to remove exhibits by mutual consent provided for in
art. 108 para. 2 C.C.P.
[125] Applying the principle that the parties control the course of their case as if
it were an end in itself would be contrary to Quebec jurisprudence and to the general
scheme of the Code of Civil Procedure. It would also conflict with the well-established
principle that the Code’s provisions must be interpreted in harmony with the Quebec
Charter and the general principles of law (preliminary provision of the C.C.P.; Lac
d’Amiante, at para. 40; Globe and Mail, at para. 45). To do so would be to disregard
the principle that the parties’ control over the course of their case is subject to limits
and that, in exercising it, parties must “comply with the principles, objectives and rules
of procedure” (art. 19 para. 1 C.C.P.), including the rules of public order and the
existing and legitimate interests of third persons.
IV. Application of the Law to the Facts
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[126] It should be noted at the outset that MediaQMI’s application was brought
in a case in which a judge had issued an order limiting the principle of open court
proceedings as soon as the legal action was filed. On the application of the respondent
CIUSSS, a judge had rendered a discretionary Norwich order on an ex parte basis and
had ordered the sealing of the judicial application and of the exhibits filed to support
it. We are therefore not in a purely private sphere of the case; the justice system was
engaged, and a judge was asked, on the application of the respondent CIUSSS, to shield
the record from public view. The appellant’s application under art. 11 C.C.P. to
determine whether the exception to the principle of open proceedings had been adhered
to should, from the start, be regarded as prima facie legitimate.
[127] It is clear that the position of the CIUSSS and Mr. Kamel is premised in
part on the idea that the character of private dispute resolution processes must be
respected and that, on the basis of the principle that the parties control the course of
their case, they can therefore resolve their private dispute out of public view. They are
not entirely wrong on this point. Because the parties control the course of their case,
they can, in principle, agree to terminate their litigation through a negotiated
discontinuance or otherwise and, in many cases, to remove their exhibits. But this
freedom to withdraw from the court process once the dispute has arisen, as in this case,
can produce effects only in relation to the principal litigation.
[128] Here, the court record was sealed from the outset, including the exhibits
filed by the respondent CIUSSS in support of its application. From the moment the
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appellant MediaQMI applied to unseal the record and access the exhibits, a new
proceeding began. That second proceeding went beyond the strictly private interests of
the parties to the principal litigation: it was of concern to the public and concerned the
legitimacy of the judicial institution and the functioning of the justice system itself. The
discontinuance filed following the application brought under art. 11 C.C.P. could not
defeat that new proceeding, which was separate from the principal litigation and related
to the proper functioning of the judicial institution, whose legitimacy depends on its
openness and in part, as we know, on media scrutiny. Once the appellant applied to
unseal the record and access the exhibits, these exhibits were subject to that new
proceeding and, it must be concluded, the parties no longer had complete control over
them.
[129] MediaQMI’s application for access to exhibits was notably based on art. 11
C.C.P., which gives it the right to “have access to court records”. Although the
application was called “Motion to unseal”, its express purpose was to gain access to
the exhibits. It is well established that the name of a juridical act is not what determines
or defines its nature (Ditomene v. Syndicat des enseignants du Cégep de l’Outaouais
(SECO), 2012 QCCA 1296, at para. 43 (CanLII)). MediaQMI was seeking access to
exhibits that were in fact in the court record at the time.
[130] With an application for access to exhibits before it, validly made under
art. 11 C.C.P., the court had to exercise the discretion conferred on it by art. 12 C.C.P.
because of the respondents’ opposition. MediaQMI was thus seeking to play its role as
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a “surrogat[e] for the public” and to inform readers of what was taking place in the
courts (Edmonton Journal, at pp. 1339-40 and 1360), a crucial role in a context where
it was alleged that fraud had been committed within a public body responsible for
ensuring the proper functioning of regional health institutions. The public has a
legitimate interest in obtaining information about a court proceeding involving
allegations of misappropriation of public funds by a manager working for that public
body.
[131] Had the CIUSSS not filed a discontinuance, the Superior Court would have
had to decide MediaQMI’s application and exercise its discretion by applying the
analytical framework established in Dagenais, Mentuck and Sierra Club. The
discontinuance could not be set up against MediaQMI to deprive it of its right to argue
its motion and, if the court had granted that application, of its right to have access to
the exhibits in the record. That right arose when its application was filed, which was
several weeks before the CIUSSS’s discontinuance. MediaQMI was therefore
“entitle[d] to the Court’s pronouncement on the legal issues thus raised that even [a]
desistment cannot now remove” (Byer v. Québec (Inspecteur général des institutions
financières), [2000] R.L. 615 (Sup. Ct.), at p. 623; see also Sobeys, at para. 37).
[132] Accordingly, the court retained its jurisdiction under art. 11 C.C.P. to
decide MediaQMI’s application. The appellant had “an acquired right to argue its
demand, which the respondent could not prejudice through a discontinuance of its
action” (Classic Fabrics, at para. 39). The principle that the parties control the course
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of the case could not adversely affect MediaQMI’s existing and legitimate interests in
seeking the application of a rule of public order like the openness of proceedings.
[133] We also note that MediaQMI’s motion was originally supposed to be
argued on April 5, 2017, prior to the CIUSSS’s discontinuance. The hearing was
postponed at the request of the CIUSSS. If the hearing had been held on that date,
MediaQMI’s application for access to exhibits would have been subject to the
discretion of the Superior Court, which would have had to apply the analytical
framework developed in Dagenais, Mentuck and Sierra Club. It would be incongruous,
to say the least, to conclude that the appellant could lose its right to argue its application
solely because of the date on which the hearing of that application was scheduled. The
analytical framework established in Dagenais, Mentuck and Sierra Club would clearly
have been applicable if the hearing had been held prior to the discontinuance. This latter
procedure could not adversely affect the right to have an application decided when that
application had already been filed.
[134] It is useful to recall that Norwich orders can be made in camera and
ex parte and may be the subject of a sealing order, as was the case here (see, e.g., Fers
et métaux américains, s.e.c. v. Picard, 2013 QCCA 2255, at paras. 3 and 7 (CanLII);
M. Piché-Messier and A. Bussières McNicoll, “Développements récents en matière de
propriété intellectuelle dans le cadre des ordonnances de type Anton Piller, Mareva et
Norwich”, in Service de la qualité de la profession du Barreau du Québec, vol. 464,
Développements récents en droit de la propriété intellectuelle (2019), 89, at pp. 127
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and 129). If a discontinuance could defeat an application for access to a record, then
Norwich orders could be obtained in a justice system that would, in many respects, be
private. The principle of open proceedings could thus be circumvented, despite the
exceptional and draconian nature of such orders.
[135] Contrary to the submission of the respondent CIUSSS, MediaQMI was
therefore not required to bring an application to set aside the discontinuance in order to
be heard. Although the discontinuance was valid and produced its effects in relation to
the CIUSSS and Mr. Kamel, it could not extinguish the rights asserted by MediaQMI
through an application filed earlier. In other words, the discontinuance quite simply
could not be set up against MediaQMI. In any event, counsel for MediaQMI
specifically objected to the removal of the exhibits at the hearing and stated that the
discontinuance had no effect on its application for access to exhibits because its right
to have its application decided had “crystallized”.
[136] The CIUSSS in fact concedes that the court still had jurisdiction to decide
MediaQMI’s motion to unseal even though the proceeding had ended as a result of the
discontinuance. It also acknowledges that a discontinuance has no impact on the right
to argue a prior application. It follows that the CIUSSS has implicitly confirmed that
the discontinuance could not adversely affect MediaQMI’s right to have the merits of
its application — which is, among other things, an application for access to exhibits —
decided, which the Superior Court judge failed to do. The Superior Court therefore
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erred in law in concluding that the discontinuance could be set up against MediaQMI
and in allowing the CIUSSS to remove the exhibits.
[137] The CIUSSS argues that the purpose of MediaQMI’s motion was not to
have access to the exhibits, but solely to have the court record unsealed, and that the
Superior Court judge granted its motion. This argument is without merit: the purpose
of a motion to unseal is to gain access to the content of the record as it stood at the time
the motion was filed. In other words, MediaQMI was applying to unseal the Superior
Court’s record in order to have access to the exhibits that were in it at the time. In any
event, the motion specifically stated that MediaQMI was seeking access to the exhibits,
and counsel for the appellant reiterated that request at the hearing on April 25, 2017.
The Superior Court did not deal with it.
[138] The respondents submit that the discontinuance could produce its effects
against the appellant’s application given that the appellant was not a party to the
principal litigation. It is clear from art. 11 C.C.P. and the applicable jurisprudence that
the appellant’s status has no bearing on this appeal. A party that files a discontinuance
renounces rights held by that party, as discontinuance is, as we have seen, a unilateral
act. Given that it is not possible to renounce the rights of others, it would be
inappropriate if the principle that the parties control the course of their case could
adversely affect rights not held by the renouncing party simply because the rights in
question are those of third persons rather than those of a party.
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[139] Pratte J. explained in Atkins that “discontinuance may not be effected to
the prejudice of third persons’ rights” (p. 66). This is all the more true given the issue
of public order raised by the application in this case. It has consistently been held that
this rule applies both to the parties’ rights and to the existing and legitimate rights of
third persons (Barzelex, at para. 18; Georgiadis, at para. 9; Banque Commerciale
Italienne du Canada v. Magas Development Corp., [1992] R.D.I. 246 (Que. Sup. Ct.),
at p. 248; 9163-5771 Québec inc., at para. 33; Portnoff (Syndic de), [2000] R.J.Q. 1290
(Sup. Ct.); see also Ferland and Emery, at Nos. 1-1702 and 1-1703). If the media have
an interest in applying for the revocation of a judgment that is contrary to the principle
of open proceedings (3834310 Canada Inc., at paras. 13, 18 and 33), then a fortiori
they have an interest in obtaining a decision on an application for access to exhibits
that was filed prior to a discontinuance, even if they are “third persons” in relation to
the proceeding.
[140] Our conclusion that the Superior Court judge should have decided
MediaQMI’s application is based on the fact that it came before him prior to the
CIUSSS’s discontinuance. In contrast, the discontinuance would have produced its full
effects against an application filed subsequently. If MediaQMI had filed its application
after the CIUSSS’s discontinuance and had sought access to the exhibits when they
were no longer in the record, its appeal would have failed on that basis unless it
challenged the constitutionality of art. 108 C.C.P. Like our colleague, we therefore do
not accept the appellant’s argument that the principle of open proceedings protects the
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right to have applications for access to exhibits decided years after a proceeding has
ended and the exhibits have been removed.
[141] In short, the CIUSSS and Mr. Kamel cannot, even by mutual consent,
prevent MediaQMI from having its application for access to exhibits decided,
circumvent the principle of open proceedings and extinguish a right not held by them.
With respect for those who hold the contrary view, we believe that to conclude
otherwise would allow parties to remove their exhibits, even in the course of a
proceeding, despite the fact that a prior application has been made. This could
undermine the fundamental principle of public access to court records affirmed by the
legislature in art. 11 C.C.P. In the circumstances of this case, art. 108 C.C.P. cannot
have this effect.
V. Conclusion
[142] For the foregoing reasons, the appeal should be allowed with costs.
[143] However, we cannot grant the appellant’s application for access to exhibits,
because the respondents have not had an opportunity to present their arguments on this
point. Moreover, the exhibits are not in the court record and it is thus impossible to
apply the analytical framework developed in Dagenais, Mentuck and Sierra Club in the
abstract. We agree with Marcotte J.A. that the case must be remanded to the Superior
Court so that it can decide the application for access to the exhibits in accordance with
the applicable law and make the orders it considers necessary, given that, in our
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respectful view, the Superior Court judge erred in allowing the CIUSSS to remove the
exhibits from the record.
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Appendix — Relevant Statutory Provisions
Charter of human rights and freedoms, CQLR, c. C-12:
23. Every person has a right to a full and equal, public and fair hearing by
an independent and impartial tribunal, for the determination of his rights
and obligations or of the merits of any charge brought against him.
The tribunal may decide to sit in camera, however, in the interests of
morality or public order.
Code of Civil Procedure, CQLR, c. C-25:
83. Prior to the end of the proceedings, filed exhibits cannot be taken out
of the record, except with the consent of the opposite party or the
authorization of the clerk, and upon giving a receipt; the parties may,
however, obtain copies from the clerk.
331.9. Once proceedings are terminated, the parties must retrieve the
exhibits they have filed, failing which the exhibits are destroyed by the
clerk one year after the date of the judgment or of the proceeding
terminating the proceedings, unless the chief justice or chief judge decides
otherwise.
Where a party, on whatever grounds, seeks a remedy against a judgment,
the exhibits that have not been retrieved by the parties are destroyed by the
clerk one year after the date of the final judgment or of the proceeding
terminating the proceedings, unless the chief justice or chief judge decides
otherwise.
The child support determination forms attached to the judgment under
article 825.13 are excepted from the above rules.
Code of Civil Procedure, CQLR, c. C-25.01:
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PRELIMINARY PROVISION
This Code establishes the principles of civil justice and, together with the
Civil Code and in harmony with the Charter of human rights and freedoms
(chapter C-12) and the general principles of law, governs procedure
applicable to private dispute prevention and resolution processes when not
otherwise determined by the parties, procedure before the courts as well as
procedure for the execution of judgments and for judicial sales.
This Code is designed to provide, in the public interest, means to prevent
and resolve disputes and avoid litigation through appropriate, efficient and
fair-minded processes that encourage the persons involved to play an
active role. It is also designed to ensure the accessibility, quality and
promptness of civil justice, the fair, simple, proportionate and economical
application of procedural rules, the exercise of the parties’ rights in a spirit
of co-operation and balance, and respect for those involved in the
administration of justice.
This Code must be interpreted and applied as a whole, in keeping with civil
law tradition. The rules it sets out are to be interpreted in the light of the
specific provisions it contains or of those of the law, and in the matters it
deals with, the Code compensates for the silence of the other laws if the
context so admits.
11. Civil justice administered by the courts is public. Anyone may attend
court hearings wherever they are held, and have access to court records and
entries in the registers of the courts.
An exception to this principle applies if the law provides for in camera
proceedings or restricts access to the court records or to certain documents
filed in a court record.
Exceptions to the principle of open proceedings set out in this chapter apply
despite section 23 of the Charter of human rights and freedoms (chapter
C-12).
16. In family matters or in matters regarding a change of designation of sex
as it appears in a minor child’s act of birth, access to the court records is
restricted. In all other matters, especially those relating to personal
integrity or capacity, access to documents pertaining to a person’s health
or psychosocial situation is restricted if they have been filed in a sealed
envelope.
Access-restricted records or documents may only be consulted or copied
by the parties, by their representatives, by lawyers and notaries, by persons
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designated by law, and by any person, including journalists, who has been
authorized by the court after proving a legitimate interest, subject to the
access conditions and procedure determined by the court.
In adoption matters, access to the court records is restricted to the parties,
their representatives and any person having proven a legitimate interest,
and is subject to the authorization of the court and to the conditions and
procedure it determines.
The Minister of Justice is considered, by virtue of office, to have a
legitimate interest to access records or documents for research, reform or
procedure evaluation purposes.
No person who has had access to a record in a family matter or in a matter
regarding a change of designation of sex as it appears in a minor child’s
act of birth may disclose or circulate any information that would allow a
party or a child whose interests are at stake in a proceeding to be identified,
unless authorized by the court or by law or unless the disclosure or
circulation of the information is necessary for the purpose of applying a
law.
19. Subject to the duty of the courts to ensure proper case management and
the orderly conduct of proceedings, the parties control the course of their
case insofar as they comply with the principles, objectives and rules of
procedure and the prescribed time limits.
They must be careful to confine the case to what is necessary to resolve the
dispute, and must refrain from acting with the intent to cause prejudice to
another person or behaving in an excessive or unreasonable manner,
contrary to the requirements of good faith.
They may, at any stage of the proceeding, without necessarily stopping its
progress, agree to settle their dispute through a private dispute prevention
and resolution process or judicial conciliation; they may also otherwise
terminate the proceeding at any time.
20. The parties are duty-bound to co-operate and, in particular, to keep one
another informed at all times of the facts and particulars conducive to a fair
debate and make sure that relevant evidence is preserved.
They must, among other things, at the time prescribed by this Code or
determined in the case protocol, inform one another of the facts on which
their contentions are based and of the evidence they intend to produce.
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108. The parties and the lawyers, or in non-contentious proceedings, the
notaries representing the parties, must see to it that exhibits and other
documents that contain identifying particulars generally held to be
confidential are filed in a form that protects the confidentiality of the
information.
Any document or real evidence that is filed in the record as an exhibit must
remain in the record until the end of the proceeding, unless all the parties
consent to its being removed. Once the proceeding has ended, the parties
must retrieve the exhibits they have filed; otherwise, the court clerk may
destroy them one year after the date on which the judgment becomes final
or the date of the pleading terminating the proceeding. In either case, the
chief justice or chief judge, if of the opinion that the exhibits can still be
useful, may stay their destruction.
However, in reviewable or reassessable matters and, in non-contentious
cases, notices, certificates, minutes, inventories, medical and psychosocial
evidence, affidavits, statements, declarations and documents made
enforceable by a judgment, including any child support determination form
attached to a judgment, cannot be removed from the record or destroyed.
213. Discontinuance by the plaintiff of the whole of a judicial application
terminates the proceeding on the notification of a notice of discontinuance
to the other parties and its filing with the court office. It restores matters to
their former state, and is effective immediately if it takes place before the
court and in the presence of the parties. The legal costs are borne by the
plaintiff, subject to an agreement between the parties or a decision of the
court.
Appeal dismissed with costs, WAGNER C.J. and ROWE, MARTIN and
KASIRER JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant: Prévost Fortin D’Aoust, Boisbriand, Que.
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Solicitors for the respondent Magdi Kamel: Grondin Savarese Legal Inc.,
Montréal.
Solicitors for the respondent Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de
services sociaux de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal: Lavery, de Billy, Montréal.
Solicitors for the intervener Fédération professionnelle des journalistes du
Québec: Gowling WLG (Canada), Montréal.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, La
Presse Inc. and Ad IDEM/Canadian Media Lawyer Association: Fasken Martineau
DuMoulin, Montréal.
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